Mitt Romney calls the free press 'essential' in essay that critiques Trump's attacks on the media America is âindebtedâ to ...
America is âindebtedâ to the free press for its work reporting on the Vietnam War, Watergate and sexual crimes committed by priests and other men in power, Senate candidate Mitt Romney wrote in an essay released Thursday.
âThe free press dispelled the false conspiracies about the 9/11 attacks, President Obamaâs birth, and Joe McCarthyâs lurking communists,â Romney wrote. âThe work of a free press is essential.â
The former Massachusetts governor and two-time presidential candidate describes in the essay how media consumption has changed in his lifetime â" from a reliance on daily newspapers, national publications and a limited number of television networks during his youth in Detroit to the modern proliferation of curate d online content that reinforces biases and in some cases contains propaganda from campaigns, political parties or foreign adversaries.
The result of those trends, Romney said, is that Americaâs political disagreements now lack a shared understanding of basic facts.
âThis represents a growing challenge for democracy, dependent as it is upon a citizenry informed by fact and truth,â Romney wrote. âIt also underscores the vital role played by professional news organizations. They may be more critical today than ever before.â
Romneyâs essay, the latest in a series of written statements posted to the Republican candidateâs campaign website, follows renewed attacks on the mainstream media by President Donald Trump. The essay references a Monday tweet by the president, in which Trump appeared to respond to a mass shooting at a synagogue in Pittsburgh by attributing anger in the country to âThe Fake News Media, the true Enemy of the People.â
Romney wrote that all U.S. presidents have likely been frustrated with the media, but none before Trump has vilified news outlets as the enemy of the American people.
âAnd, more importantly, denigrating the media diminishes an institution that is critical to democracy, both here and abroad,â Romney wrote. âAs a political tactic, it may be brilliant, but it comes with a large cost to the cause of freedom.â
In a prepared statement, Romneyâs Democratic Senate opponent, Jenny Wilson, said it is no secret that Trump reacts inappropriately when he is held accountable, including by lashing out at members of the press.
âInvestigative and thorough reporting must continue to be a check on those in power â" regardless of who holds office,â Wilson said. âAnd, as citizens, we have to support our local press and regional news outlets, who have their fingers on the pulse of our communities.â
On Wednesday, Salt Lake Trib une owner and Publisher Paul Huntsman explained the paperâs endorsement of Romney on the âTrib Talkâ podcast. He said Romneyâs experience as a national political candidate makes him uniquely positioned to address challenges facing the state and nation as a freshman member of the Senate, if elected.
âThis is a great opportunity," Huntsman said, âfor not only our state but also for the country to have someone of that stature to be able to help solve some of these problems.â
Huntsman also criticized elected leaders, including some of Utahâs, who have failed to defend the media against Trumpâs attacks.
Freedom of the press is a pillar of the U.S. Constitution, the publisher said, which members of Congress take an oath to defend when they are sworn into office.
âThere are certain [representatives] that w e have here in our state that like to claim that theyâre experts on the Constitution,â Huntsman said. âWell, here we have a direct attack on the Constitution, and they donât say a word about it.â
Romneyâs essay ends with an anecdote from a campaign stop, in which a constituent asked whether he would take action in the Senate to shut down national news outlets like The New York Times. Romney said he answered âof course notâ and found it disturbing that the constituent pressed the issue.
He said he is sometimes irritated by inaccurate reporting, particularly when he is the subject of that reporting. But a free press, even when it is biased, is guaranteed by the Constitution because of the role it plays in preserving democracy, he wrote.
âThe media is essential to our Republic, to our freedom, to the cause of freedom abroad, and to our national security,â Romney wrote. âIt is very much our friend.â
A spokeswoman for Romney declined to comment on the essay, or provide examples of inaccurate reporting that irritated the candidate.
Source: Google News | Netizen 24 United States
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