'We're the news now': Pro-Trump mob targeted
journalists at US Capitol
Pro-Trump rioters wrote ‘Murder the media’ on a
Capitol door and attacked a group of reporters and their camera equipment
Julia
Carrie Wong
@juliacarriew
Email
Fri 8 Jan
2021 00.35 GMTLast modified on Fri 8 Jan 2021 00.52 GMT
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2021/jan/07/capitol-attack-trump-targeted-journalists
The violent
mob of Donald Trump supporters that stormed the US Capitol on Wednesday
targeted journalists and the press during the rampage, incited by a president
who has branded the news media an “enemy of the people”.
“Murder the
media,” was the message scrawled on a door of the Capitol during the siege.
Outside, the Bloomberg News reporter William Turton captured on video the
moment that part of the mob began to attack a group of reporters and their
camera equipment while yelling, “Fuck the mainstream media.” As one man
brandished a flag pole as a weapon and others menaced, the journalists
abandoned their equipment to retreat.
“We are the
news now,” said one of the rioters, according to the BuzzFeed News reporter
Paul McLeod. The sentiment has become common among adherents of QAnon and other
rightwing conspiracy movements, who have worked to create an alternative
disinformation ecosystem that is impervious to reality or evidence-based
reporting.
The group
subsequently fashioned a noose from the abandoned camera equipment, McLeod
reported.
The
reporters, Zoeann Murphy and Whitney Leaming, said on Twitter that they were
released quickly and were safe.
Leaming
referred obliquely to the strain and trauma of reporting under such conditions,
however, tweeting, “I have heard from so many journalist friends/colleagues who
were at or around the Capitol today that they are ‘fine’. This is a lie. They
are not fine but they push aside their physical safety and mental health to
focus on the story at hand [because] one of the most important rules of
journalism is that the story is not about you. Just please remember that and
maybe not threaten their life, I beg you.”
Many
reporters ended up sheltering alongside members of Congress as the Capitol came
under attack. The Los Angeles Times reporter Sarah D Wire wrote about hiding in
the House gallery during an armed standoff. Norma Torres, a congresswoman from
southern California, used her Twitter account to send a photo of Wire to the LA
Times. The message: she is safe.
Advocates
for freedom of the press condemned the day’s events, noting that the Capitol
building is the workplace not just for the country’s lawmakers, but for those
who report on them.
“Yesterday’s
attack on the US Capitol posed a grave threat to our democracy,” said Bruce
Brown, the executive director of the Reporters Committee for Freedom of the
Press, in a statement.
“Rioters at
the Capitol called for violence against members of the news media, destroyed
news equipment and verbally harassed journalists as the ‘enemy of the people’ –
actions that not only pose a dire threat to those working tirelessly to bring
information to our communities, but also to the press freedom that is a bedrock
value of our nation.
“These
actions are the direct result of years of this language stoking fear and hate
for one of our most vital institutions. Our free press is crucial to democracy,
and indeed, one of the pillars that will help keep it standing beyond this
moment.”


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