The U.S. Senate’s Wednesday acquittal of President Donald Trump after the House of Representatives impeached him for abuse of power and obstruction of Congress marks a staggering defeat for the rule of law -- and a victory for Fox News, whose lies and propaganda made it a bulwark for the president. The network was created for a moment like this, and it did its job.
Twenty-four years ago, Roger Ailes, an acolyte of Richard Nixon who blamed the press for driving that president from office, founded Fox News, ushering in an era of “post-truth” politics for the benefit of the conservative movement and the Republican Party. And while he resigned in disgrace in 2016 and passed away the following year, his vision of a right-wing megaphone powerful enough to shield Republican presidents from accountability has been vindicated.
The broad contours of the damning case against Trump have been visible for months: He corruptly pressured a foreign government to investigate his political opponent, former Vice President Joe Biden, working through both administration officials and his personal lawyer, Rudy Giuliani. Reams of testimony and documents have since revealed crucial details about the precise nature of the quid pro quo, the construction of the fabricated Biden conspiracy theory it revolved around, the illegality of the administration’s actions, and Fox’s central role in every phase of the scandal. And subpoenaing additional witnesses and documents, which the Senate rejected Friday, could have filled in more gaps.
With Trump's presidency in jeopardy, he turned to the network that had spent the last few years merging with his administration. Fox was the powerful propaganda apparatus Trump needed to ensure his political survival, twisting every fact to cover up the voluminous evidence of his rampant criminality and stiffen the spines of his supporters.
Ever since House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, citing a whistleblower’s complaint, announced the initiation of an impeachment inquiry into Trump’s actions, Fox has done everything in its power to muddy the waters and conceal the truth from its viewers. The network’s personalities, with a mere handful of exceptions, have thrown out an array of often contradictory rebuttals, working overtime to convince their audience that Trump hadn’t done what he had been accused of doing. But after months of moving the goalposts in response to new evidence of Trump’s culpability, they ultimately settled on precisely the opposite argument: Trump did it, and that was fine -- or even worthy of applause.