In early 2020, Fox News heavily touted the purportedly sinister “unmaskings” of former Donald Trump adviser Michael Flynn during Trump’s presidential transition, presenting those acts as implicating President Barack Obama and his administration in “the biggest abuse of power scandal in American history.” But the network still has not updated its viewers with Tuesday’s revelation that then-Attorney General William Barr received a report in September 2020 concluding that those “unmaskings” had been routine and that no criminal probe was justified.
The “unmasking” pseudoscandal was a Fox production that demonstrates both the network’s unprecedented intertwining with the Trump administration and how the right-wing’s propaganda machine functions. Former Fox contributor Richard Grenell launched the saga from his post in the Trump administration, and it got an assist from Trump administration official Kerri Kupec, who later joined the network. It received hours of frothy Fox coverage from hosts who described it in the most inflammatory terms possible. And once it was debunked, the network moved on to new attacks without bothering to update their viewers, because its primary purpose is supporting the Republican Party.
Grenell, a former Fox contributor then serving as acting director of national intelligence due to his personal loyalty to Trump, introduced this iteration of the story in May 2020. He produced a list of senior Obama administration officials who had received Flynn’s name after asking the National Security Agency to reveal through the standard process of “unmasking” the identity of an individual generically referenced in an NSA report. The document, which seemed designed to bolster Trump’s reelection campaign by providing just enough information to attract attention from friendly or insufficiently skeptical media outlets, did not establish that the actions were inappropriate.
But that was enough for Fox, which gave the story wall-to-wall coverage and presented it as a major scandal that undermined special counsel Robert Mueller’s investigation into Russian interference in the 2016 election. The network’s demagoguery got a boost from Kupec, who in her role as DOJ spokesperson confirmed during an interview on Sean Hannity’s Fox program that Barr had appointed then-U.S. Attorney John Bash to review the case.