This week in election denial
In the final weeks of the presidential campaign, major newspapers are giving former President Donald Trump’s federal indictment for alleged crimes related to the January 6 insurrection a fraction of the coverage they gave former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton’s use of a private email server in 2016.
Media Matters reviewed print coverage in five newspapers for stories mentioning Trump’s indictment in the week following U.S. District Judge Tanya Chutkan’s October 2 unsealing of special counsel Jack Smith’s latest filing, which reveals damning new evidence of the former president’s alleged crimes. Media Matters found the papers ran 26 combined articles mentioning Trump’s indictment in the week after the unsealing of Smith’s filing. But those same papers published 100 combined articles — nearly 4 times as many — that mentioned Clinton’s server in the week after then-FBI Director James Comey’s notorious October 28, 2016, letter on new developments in that probe.
Obsessive news media focus on Clinton’s server in the final weeks of the 2016 presidential campaign helped Trump to victory, even as Comey ultimately reconfirmed that no charges were appropriate in that case. But eight years later, with one presidential candidate facing active prosecution for federal charges related to his attempt to subvert an election, outlets are making different choices.
Donald Trump’s deadly lies about the federal response to Hurricane Helene depend on the impermeability of the right-wing information bubble. His response has been characterized by conspiracy theories and grievance-mongering for political gain, and the right-wing media bubble is helping him.
The Biden administration won plaudits from GOP elected officials across the region, but Trump falsely claimed the federal government abandoned the public. Americans affected by the storm can access a robust program of federal assistance, but he falsely claims they could only get $750 in aid. The White House stressed there’s plenty of FEMA funds to respond to both Helene and MIlton — and Republicans are reportedly the ones blocking additional funding — but Trump falsely claims Vice President Kamala Harris blew “all her FEMA money” housing immigrants.
Trump is trying to win votes with these lies, and the only reason this strategy is remotely plausible is that the right-wing media ecosystem is willing to play along with it. The news sources Republicans rely on, from MAGA influencers to Fox stars, have bolstered Trump’s lies at every turn. The result is that right-wing audiences are bombarded with falsehoods from within an echo chamber.
The right-wing alternative reality bubble is always toxic, but in situations like disaster relief, it can be deadly. Right now, the sources that many victims of Hurricanes Helene and Milton depend on for news are lying to them.
Right-wing media figures have amplified a conspiracy theory that Democrats are attempting to steal the 2024 election by weaponizing a longstanding law allowing Americans overseas to vote. Right-wing junk site The Gateway Pundit appears to have originated the false claim in early September, and Donald Trump promoted it later that month.
The September 6 Gateway Pundit blog mischaracterized a Democratic Party press release announcing a plan to register Americans living overseas to vote through a 1986 law known as the Uniformed and Overseas Citizens Absentee Voting Act. The article’s headline falsely claimed that the get-out-the-vote effort was an “Undetectable Way to Steal the Election From Trump,” rather than a legal avenue to reach voters. Shortly after Trump endorsed The Gateway Pundit’s misinformation, Republican officials in Pennsylvania, North Carolina, and Michigan filed lawsuits challenging aspects of the law and other related laws designed to facilitate overseas voting.
The right-wing targeting of this law comes against the backdrop of a larger conservative campaign to spread fear that noncitizens will vote in large numbers in November. (There is no evidence to support this allegation.) Moreover, the GOP has its own outreach program to Americans abroad called Republicans Overseas — one of the more than 100 conservative organizations on the advisory board of Project 2025.