POLITICAL
MEMO
Trump and Fox News, Twin Titans of Politics, Hit
With Back-to-Back Rebukes
Donald Trump’s criminal indictment and Fox News’s
civil trial have nothing in common, but, combined, they delivered a rare
reckoning for two forces that have transformed politics.
Jonathan
Weisman
By Jonathan
Weisman
April 1,
2023
https://www.nytimes.com/2023/04/01/us/politics/trump-fox-news-court-cases.html
For the
better part of a decade, Donald J. Trump and his allies at Fox News have
beguiled some Americans and enraged others as they spun up an alternative world
where elections turned on fraud, one political party oppressed another, and one
man stood against his detractors to carry his version of truth to an adoring
electorate.
Then this
week, on two consecutive days, the former president and the highest-rated cable
news channel were delivered a dose of reality by the American legal system.
On
Thursday, Mr. Trump became the first former president in history to be indicted
on criminal charges, after a Manhattan grand jury’s examination of hush money
paid to a pornographic film actress in the final days of the 2016 election.
The next
day, a judge in Delaware Superior Court concluded that Fox hosts and guests had
repeatedly made false claims about voting machines and their supposed role in a
fictitious plot to steal the 2020 election, and that Dominion Voting Systems’
$1.6 billion defamation lawsuit against the network should go to trial.
A lawyer
for Fox News, Dan Webb, center, leaving the first hearing for the Dominion v.
Fox case in Wilmington, Del., on March 21.Credit...Hannah Beier for The New
York Times
Both
defendants dispute the claims. Still, the back-to-back blows against twin
titans of American politics landed as a reminder of the still-unfolding
reckoning with the tumult of the Trump presidency.
For the
left, the seismic week delivered an “I told you so” years in the making.
Democrats who have long wanted Mr. Trump criminally charged got the
satisfaction of watching a prosecutor and a grand jury agree.
A day
later, after years of arguing that Fox News was hardly fair and balanced, they
could read a judge’s finding that Fox had not conducted “good-faith,
disinterested reporting” on Dominion. Fox argues that statements made on air
alleging election fraud are protected by the First Amendment.
While the
two cases have nothing in common in substance, they share a rare and powerful
potential. In both, any final judgments will be rendered in a courtroom and not
by bickering pundits on cable news and editorial pages.
“There will
always be a remnant, no matter how the matter is resolved in court, who will
refuse to accept the judgment,” said Norman Eisen, a government ethics lawyer
who served as special counsel to the House Judiciary Committee during Mr.
Trump’s first impeachment. “But when you look at other post-upheaval societies,
judicial processes reduce factions down to a few hard-core believers.”
He added,
“A series of court cases and judgments can break the fever.”
That, of
course, could prove to be a Democrat’s wishful thinking.
In this
moment of constant campaigning and tribal partisanship, even the courts have
had difficulty puncturing the ideological bubbles that Mr. Trump and Fox News
pundits have created. The legal system produced a $25 million settlement of
fraud charges against Trump University, dismissed dozens of lies about
malfeasance in the 2020 election, pressed for the search for missing classified
documents and ruled numerous times that Dominion’s machines did not in fact
change votes.
Yet
hundreds of thousands of Americans remain devoted to both defendants.
Embarrassing
and damaging material has already come out through both cases, with little
immediate sign of backlash.
Thousands
of text messages, emails and other internal company documents disclosed to
Dominion and released publicly portray high-level figures at the network as
bent on maintaining ratings supremacy by giving audiences what they wanted,
regardless of the truth.
Texts show
the star prime time host Tucker Carlson calling Mr. Trump a “demonic force,”
and the chairman of Fox Corporation, Rupert Murdoch, describing Sean Hannity as
“privately disgusted by Trump.”
Fox News
has said Dominion took private conversations out of context. Its ratings
dominance appears untouched by the negative headlines in recent weeks. Data
from Nielsen show that in March the 10 top-rated cable shows in America were
all on Fox News, led by “Tucker Carlson Tonight,” and that 14 of the top 20
were produced by the network.
Still,
experts believe the case has already resonated.
“I’ve never
seen a case before where journalists said they didn’t believe the story they
were telling but were going to keep telling it because it’s what the audience
wanted to hear,” said Lyrissa Lidsky, a professor of constitutional law at the
University of Florida and an expert on defamation law. “It’s a shock wave
saying it’s time to get serious about accountability.”
Democrats,
too, could see their illusions fall. Although many have clamored to see Mr.
Trump charged, and felt vindicated this week, the risks of failure are
considerable.
If Mr.
Trump’s lawyers file to have the charges simply dismissed as prosecutorial
overreach and quickly win, the consequences would almost certainly strengthen
Mr. Trump, who will make the case — and possibly others to follow — central to
his primary campaign.
But in a
court of law, the magnetism that Mr. Trump and Fox News have over their
audiences may lose some of its power. No matter how many times the former
president insists outside the courtroom that he’s the victim of a political
prosecution, inside the courtroom his lawyers will have to address the specific
charges. They will win or lose based on legal arguments, not bluster.
“I’ve been
around for 50 years, and I’ve heard the political argument before,” said
Stanley M. Brand, a veteran Washington defense lawyer. Mr. Brand cited the
“Abscam” bribery case of the 1970s, when the defendants accused President Jimmy
Carter of orchestrating the bribery sting, or the investigation of Senator
Robert G. Torricelli, which was also surrounded by charges of politics. “It’s
never worked in a court of law.”
James Bopp
Jr., a conservative defense lawyer, said he agreed with virtually all
Republicans that the Manhattan district attorney had coaxed his grand jury to
bring forward a specious indictment for the political purpose of damaging Mr.
Trump.
But, he
said, Mr. Trump’s lawyers must answer the charges, not grandstand on the politics.
“A charge
is not automatically dismissible because it’s brought for political purpose,”
he said. “The motive of prosecutors may be pertinent to the broader society.
It’s not pertinent to a judge.”
The exact
charges against Mr. Trump may not be known until he is arraigned on Tuesday.
The grand jury that brought the indictment was examining payments to Stormy
Daniels and the core question of whether those payments were illegally
disguised as business expenditures, a misdemeanor that would rise to a felony
if those payments could be labeled an illegal campaign expenditure.
If past
legal skirmishes are an indication, Mr. Trump is likely to drag the proceedings
out for months, if not years, with motion after motion as he builds his third
presidential campaign around what he called on Friday the “unprecedented
political persecution of the president and blatant interference in the 2024
election.”
Likewise,
Fox News will almost certainly continue to frame the Dominion case as that of a
corporation intent on stifling the First Amendment’s guarantees of free speech
and freedom of the press.
“This case
is and always has been about the First Amendment protections of the media’s
absolute right to cover the news,” the network said in a statement Friday.
That may be
left for a court to decide.
Ken
Bensinger contributed reporting.
Jonathan
Weisman is a Chicago-based political correspondent, veteran journalist and
author of the novel “No. 4 Imperial Lane” and the nonfiction book
“(((Semitism))): Being Jewish in America in the Age of Trump.” His
career in journalism stretches back 30 years. @jonathanweisman
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