Trump will tell a story tonight — but that’s not the real story
One dog barking: an occasional column by John Dineen
What’s the story?
That’s the starting point, the fundamental question all journalists are trying to answer when they sit down to write. And how they answer that question tonight has never been more consequential.
Donald Trump has announced plans for a 9 p.m. speech that is widely expected to amplify his call for restrictions on voting in this November’s election. In support of that goal, he reportedly will unveil “new intelligence” exposing foreign interference in the 2020 election — which he continues to claim he won, all facts to the contrary.
First things first: Which networks will air the speech live? They’re not obligated to do so, and they have rejected presidential requests in the past when they deemed the topic too political. I think we can safely assume Fox News will, and perhaps the newly supine CBS News will as well.
For the other networks, this is an integrity check. Because the story Trump will tell is not the real story, given how fantastical it’s likely to be. The real story is the speech’s role in Trump’s strategy to bend to his will the outcome of November’s election.
Many journalists are already telling that story:
Tom Jones (Poynter): Should networks air Trump’s national address live?
Victor Nava (New York Post): AOC argues networks have ‘ethical obligation’ to not air Trump’s upcoming speech about elections
Parker Molloy (The Present Age): The Predicate
John Knefel (Media Matters): The plot to subvert the midterms is getting stranger and more dangerous
Margaret Sullivan (American Crisis): What we need right now is a big, juicy ‘truth sandwich’
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Hegseth announces new policy to screen troops for low testosterone
ICE should continue making traffic stops despite recent shootings, Trump says
White House lobbies skeptical Republicans on $95 billion reconciliation package to fund Iran war, farm aid, voter ID measures
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D.C. Council members push back on plan to keep National Guard troops in the city into 2029
Heather Cox Richardson on how Democrats, GOP see the purpose of government, more
Robert Reich suggests you call your lawmakers and tell them to vote no on pro-crypto CLARITY Act
Linda Greenhouse: This was the Supreme Court term when the court’s obsession with ‘originalism’ descended into parody
Smoke from Canada wildfires moving into U.S. Midwest, Northeast, NASA says
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KFF: Facing funding losses, states calling out big businesses with employees on Medicaid
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House Democratic Leader Hakeem Jeffries
Senate Democratic Leader Chuck Schumer
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