Donald Trump’s principal opponent is, of course, Kamala Harris, but the former president targets independent news organizations with nearly the same vigor as the Democratic vice president. There are, however, some nuances to the Republican’s campaign against the free press, and it’s worth appreciating the differences.
Broadly speaking, Trump’s lines of attack fall into three categories. The first is name-calling: The former president, for example, has spent years referring to journalists as “the enemy of the people,” media outlets as “evil,” and news professionals as “scum.”
The second is more serious: The Republican hopes to use governmental power to crack down on journalism he dislikes. It’s precisely why Trump has invested so much time and energy, for example, talking about the FCC stripping news networks of their broadcast licenses for airing coverage he disapproves of. He’s filed all kinds of lawsuits against the media outlets, and targeted news organizations with FEC complaints.
We saw some abuses along these lines during his first term in the White House, and these tactics would almost certainly get worse in a second term.
But the third category is the most pernicious and most dangerous: Trump isn’t above talking about violence when going after the free press. NBC News reported on one of the GOP candidate’s final campaign events of the election cycle.
Speaking about the bulletproof glass positioned in front of his lectern, the former president said that for a bullet to hit him in an attempted assassination, a shooter would have to “shoot through the fake news, and I don’t mind that so much.”
His Pennsylvania audience apparently found this amusing.
Trump: "To get me, somebody would have to shoot through the fake news and I don't mind that so much. I don't mind that." pic.twitter.com/TFOGN2PTLb








