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The war of press versus power in America

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The dominant ideological battle between the media and power in America entered the second level Tuesday, November 13, 2018. CNN sued the American President over denial of access to the White House for its Senior Correspondent Mr Jim Acosta because the revocation of the credentials violates the constitutional right of freedom of the press.

“The administration stripped Acosta of his pass to enter the White House following President Donald Trump’s contentious news conference last week, where Acosta refused to give up a microphone when the president said he did not want to hear anything more from him”, AP reports.

“White House Press Secretary Sarah Sanders said: “this is just more grandstanding from CNN, and we will vigorously defend against his lawsuit.”

“Trump has made CNN and its reporters a particular target of his denunciation of “fake news” and characterisation of the media as an enemy of the people. CNN CEO Jeff Zucker, in a letter to White House chief of staff John Kelly, called it a “pattern of targeted harassment.”

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“The White House initially contended it was Acosta’s refusal to give up the microphone that led to his banishment; CNN said it’s apparent the president didn’t like his questions.“Mr. Acosta’s press credentials must be restored so that all members of the press know they will remain free to ask tough questions, challenge government officials and report the business of the nation to the American people,” said Theodore Olson, former U.S. solicitor general and one of CNN’s lawyers on the case.

The White House Correspondents’ Association backed the lawsuit, filed in Washington, D.C., district court.“The president of the United States should not be in the business of arbitrarily picking the men and women who cover him,” said Olivier Knox, president of the correspondents’ group.

“CNN asked for an injunction to immediately reinstate Acosta, as well as a hearing on the larger issue of barring a reporter. To prove the administration’s case last week, White House press secretary Sarah Sanders distributed via Twitter a doctored video sped up to make Acosta’s physical actions toward the intern seem more threatening.”

As we noted in a 2017 essay, the ideological war hacks back to halcyon days. The Age of Enlightenment seemed to have declared it for one party. In the ring are Donald Trump and the mainstream media of America.

Resolution of the war could lead to a reiteration of the roles of the press or modifications of existing theories, notably the social responsibility theory.

Donald Trump brings to the battle the full armoury of the Office of President of the United States, his popularity with American voters and the backing of the White Anglo-Saxon Pentecostal Church. The White Church claims God sent Donald Trump for these times. There are many Nigerian supporters of Donald Trump who hate the American media, notably CNN, in defence of Trump.  Donald Trump fought long odds to become President of the USA.

On the other side are the major media organs of America. They include The New York Times, CNN, and The Washington Post. Other forces on the press portion of the battle include The Huffington Post, NBC News, Time, Esquire, New Yorker and various local titles. Across the ocean, other media are providing supporting firepower. They include The Guardian and the venerable BBC.

On their part, the media have a long history of fighting battles for relevance with authority figures and are now well entrenched to fight the ideological battle.

Twitter maven Trump only on Friday, February 17, 2017 declared the media “the enemy of the American people.” He stated:
Donald J. Trump
 

✔@realDonaldTrump

The FAKE NEWS media (failing @nytimes@NBCNews@ABC@CBS@CNN) is not my enemy; it is the enemy of the American People!”

 

Earlier, his then chief strategist Steve Bannon had called the media the “opposition party”.

On the surface, the war is a fall out of the last US election. In the run-up to the US General Elections that Trump won, most of the media endorsed his opponent, Hilary Clinton. The media, as well as pollsters, projected a win for Clinton. Eventually, Trump won the Electoral College but lost the popular vote to Clinton.

Through it all and particularly on assuming office, Donald Trump has sought to delegitimise the American media by branding them as bearers of fake news. It is a battle for control of minds and hacks back to the days of Emperor Kings or to Africa where rulers insist that they only have the final say on matters.

Donald Trump has come with a desire to upturn many things in America. The role of the American press is one of his primary targets. He does not want a press that probes, questions and continuously targets power holders, making them accountable in words and deeds to the citizens.

Centuries of practice have seen the American press established as defenders of democracy. Indeed, a former American President Thomas Jefferson underlined the importance of the media to American democracy. During his time as U.S. minister to France, Thomas Jefferson penned a letter to a statesman from Virginia, waxing poetic about the importance of a free press.

“The basis of our governments being the opinion of the people, the very first object should be to keep that right,” Jefferson wrote to Edward Carrington in 1787. “And were it left to me to decide whether we should have a government without newspapers, or newspapers without a government, I should not hesitate a moment to prefer the latter. ButI should mean that every man should receive those papers and be capable of reading them”.

 

The relationship between the media and power has of necessity been adversarial.  Professor Fred Omu captured this well in Press and Politics in Nigeria: 1859-1935, his history of the early Nigerian press. It tells of the struggles of the pioneers with the colonial administrators. Section 2, subsection 2 of the 1999 Nigerian constitution similarly establishes a basis for an adversarial relationship when it charges the media to uphold the Fundamental Objectives and Directive Principles of State Policy of Nigeria and hold the government accountable to the people.

Many governments do not like the media on account of its role in holding government accountable. Governments with an agenda that runs against the currents are particularly prickly about the media. In the case of Trump, the man who deployed the media to run a campaign against a sitting President for years now considers those same vehicles for his projection as bearers of fake news. It was not fake news when the media reported his birther campaign against Barack Obama.

Trump is acting like disgraced former President Richard Nixon who also saw the press as enemies. He told Henry Kissinger in 1972, “The press is the enemy, the establishment is the enemy, the professors are the enemy.”

The American media has operated with the philosophical underpinning of the social responsibility theory of the press, itself an outcrop of the Hutchins Commission Report of 1947 that affirmed the significant role of the media in modern society and the need for it to exercise its enormous powers with a responsibility to society.

Robert Hutchins and his 12 wise men took four years to write their report. Time magazine publisher Henry Luce commissioned the effort at a time when the media was subject to much criticism. Big and powerful publishers were unpopular with the public, while the public suspected the motivations and objectives of the press.

The situation today recalls that era. Trump has many supporters who see the news media today as evil, unfair or unbalanced in their coverage. CNN, with its global reach and its pitched battle with Trump, represents for many a symbol of what is wrong with the media.

Longer term, the media would depend above all on its fundamentals in this long war. Those fundamentals are the practice of verification and the canons encapsulated in the four pillars of the Code of Sigma Delta Chi, the Society of Professional Journalists. Those enjoin journalists to Seek truth and report it; Minimise harm; Act independently and Be accountable. Across the world, journalism ethics deal with the principal concerns at the heart of the profession. These are truth, accuracy, fairness, transparency, proper representation, attribution and the right of reply.

Practising ethically would be the central defence of the American media in the war. Interesting times ahead.

 

Chido Nwakanma