President Donald Trump shatters political norms at an unprecedented rate that can overwhelm the press. So what does it mean to “adopt” his “playbook”? According to CBS News White House correspondent Paula Reid, Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden did so on Friday by expressing frustration with one of her network’s reporters who had asked him about the New York Post’s smear campaign. “We cannot normalize insulting reporters for asking questions,” she added.
The Trump “playbook” on the media should be defined by the goals, tactics, and results that distinguish him from typical politicians. Biden and Trump have both criticized reporters. But that doesn’t make them unique -- many politicians push back when they view questions as unfair. Suggesting otherwise diminishes Trump’s deviancy, which only makes it more difficult for the public to understand the differences between the candidates and harder for the press to disincentivize his particularly horrific attacks on journalists.
Trump’s self-described “war with the media" is at the core of his political strategy. By delegitimizing the press as a source of negative information about his regime, he keeps his base intact and confuses other members of the public, making it more difficult to hold him accountable.
His sustained, vicious campaign against journalists is built on decades of rhetoric from right-wing media outlets and politicians. But it is both more intense and more consistent than anything we’ve seen before. He regularly invokes terms like “fake news” and “enemy of the people” to cast aspersions on news outlets that produce critical reporting; baselessly accuses them of fabricating negative stories about his administration using anonymous sources that don’t exist; characterizes individual journalists who displease him with vile language; frequently calls for the firings of specific reporters, cable and broadcast news hosts, and network heads; treats them as hate objects during campaign rallies; publicly cheers physical assaults on journalists by Republican politicians and law enforcement; and even reportedly uses the power of the federal government to apply pressure to the owners of media organizations.
At two rallies just this past weekend, Trump used the phrase “fake news” at least 14 times; described CNN reporters in particular as “sick people” and “one of the most dishonest groups of people I’ve ever seen in my life”; repeatedly claimed journalists are in cahoots with Democrats, including by falsely accusing them of giving Biden “the questions and the answers” at press conferences; and urged attendees to vote for him in order to “send a message to the fake news media.” As I was finishing up this article, he told a reporter during a press gaggle that he was “a criminal for not reporting” on the Hunter Biden story.