Fox News hosts and commentators are exploiting the 19th anniversary of the 9/11 terrorist attacks on New York City and the Washington, D.C., area to justify President Donald Trump’s deliberate decision — revealed this week in interview excerpts with journalist Bob Woodward from earlier this year — to “play it down” on the deadly nature of the coronavirus pandemic.
In Fox’s positive interpretation, though, Trump’s response is just like some key actions by President George W. Bush in 2001 — most notably, when Bush continued to read a children’s book during an appearance at a school, then posed for photos with the children and school staff, even after he had been informed by his chief of staff, Andrew Card, that the country was under attack.
Fox News has been earnestly defending Trump’s deliberate misleading of the public on the seriousness of the coronavirus — and by extension, the network’s own key role in that misinformation campaign. And while the network’s commentators have claimed Trump was showing proper leadership by not inciting a panic, they have also spread a misleadingly edited video of Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden telling the public in February to remain calm but left out his warning that this was also a very serious situation.
Fox & Friends co-host Steve Doocy added the idea of Trump’s handling of the pandemic to the events of 9/11 Thursday morning on his show, as he discussed how military and intelligence leaders receive information on potential threats to the country.
“I mentioned at the top of the show tomorrow is September 11th. I think what we have learned over the last 19 years is that ... stuff crosses their desk every day — scary intel, some group is trying to do this, they're trying to poison the water or anthrax or all that stuff — the president gets it in the form of his presidential daily briefing every day. And what does he do?” Doocy asked rhetorically. “Well, he doesn't, you know, blurt it out, ‘Hey, somebody's trying to blow up Akron,’ or something like that. Instead, as he said, you know, he didn't want people to freak out, so he tried to keep people calm.”
This reference to presidential daily briefings seemed oddly reminiscent of the public revelation in the years after 9/11 that an item in Bush’s daily briefing of August 6, 2001, had been titled “Bin Laden Determined to Strike in U.S” and that the Bush administration had seemingly ignored other key warnings. And yet, Doocy seemed to be citing it as a positive example of presidential leadership.