'They reported the exact wrong thing': Trump threatens to sue unrepentant Pulitzer board for defamation over awards to 'Russia Hoax' journalists
Former President Donald Trump said on Saturday that he will sue the Pulitzer Prize Board for awarding journalists who advanced the discredited "Russia Hoax" narrative as well as for doubling down on allegedly defamatory remarks. For over a year, Trump has insisted that the Pulitzer board revoke the prizes to the New York Times and the Washington Post because the awarded reporting "have become worthless and meaningless."
What are the details?
At his "Save America" rally in Robstown, Texas, on Saturday, Trump split his attention between the future and the recent past.
Concerning the future, Trump indicated he would "probably" run again for president in 2024, stating, "In order to make our country successful, safe and glorious again, I will probably have to do it again." He emphasized the need to focus first on the midterm elections and on securing a "historic victory for the Republican Party this November."
Regarding the recent past, Trump underscored how those who covered so-called Russian interference in the 2016 presidential election should not be permitted to keep their prizes for national reporting.
Rather than on individual journalists, Trump honed his critique on the Pulitzer Prize Board, which recently refused to rescind the awards that had been conferred to reporters for pushing the "Russia Hoax."
The awards in question went to the staffs of the New York Times and the Washington Post for what the Pulitzer Prize Board characterized as "deeply sourced, relentlessly reported coverage in the public interest that dramatically furthered the nation’s understanding of Russian interference in the 2016 presidential election and its connections to the Trump campaign, the President-elect’s transition team and his eventual administration."
The former president said, "They gave out the Pulitzer Prize for reporting on the Russia Hoax, reporting on Russia, Russia, Russia. So you have reporters from the Washington Post, the New York Times, that got Pulitzer Prizes, and they reported the exact wrong thing."
Whereas the liberal media was awarded for "wrong reporting," advancing and amplifying spurious claims that Trump and his team had colluded with Russia, the former president noted that "other people should have gotten the Pulitzer Prize because, frankly, they got it right for years."
Trump claimed that "they don't do Pulitzer prizes" for those who, in his view, got it right, such as Fox News hosts Sean Hannity, Tucker Carlson, Jeanine Pirro, and Laura Ingraham.
Trump indicated that, in lieu of another request for rectification, he will now be "suing the Pulitzer organization to have those prizes taken back" within the next two weeks.
"By allowing these people that got Russia, Russia, Russia wrong [to get the award]," said Trump, "they're actually libeling me because they're saying they got it right and it turned out to be a hoax."
\u201cJUST IN: President Donald Trump has just announced tonight that he will be suing the Pulitzer organization in the next two weeks to take retract the Pulitzer Prizes from certain journalists who received it for reporting on the Russia Hoax \ud83d\udca5 \n\nEnemy of the people.\u201d— Personal Blog Media News (@Personal Blog Media News) 1666487564
The Pulitzer Prize Board's refusal to rescind
After it received the Pulitzer in 2018, the New York Times celebrated itself for "changing the nation's understanding of Russian interference in the 2016 election."
The Washington Post similarly ran an article at the time, boasting that the "Post's revelations about Russia, including contacts between Russian figures and President Trump's associates and advisers, helped set the stage for the special counsel's ongoing investigation of the administration."
That investigation, which the Department of Justice said cost $32 million, ended with Special Counsel Robert Mueller finding no evidence of Russian collusion.
Even after the Steel dossier was discredited (admitted in the pages of the New York Times), the NYT and the Washington Post both doubled down, suggesting as late as spring 2022 that the Russian investigation was not undercut.
Townhall noted in 2019 that "Neither one of the newspapers' reporting was 'heavily sourced,' although it was 'relentlessly reported,' probably because they were trying to push their editorial agenda ... Now that we know there was no collusion, now that we know there was no obstruction, does this mean we get a 'redo' on this award?"
Trump has been asking the same question for years.
Lawsuit
The Hill reported that last October, Trump wrote to Pulitzer's interim administrator claiming that the award in national reporting, which had been given to the two liberal papers, was "based on false reporting of a non-existent link between the Kremlin and the Trump campaign."
Facing similar demands from Trump and others, the Pulitzer board announced on July 18 that it had commissioned two independent reviews of the work for which prizes were awarded.
According to a statement issued by the board, the "separate reviews converged in their conclusions: that no passages or headlines, contentions or assertions in any of the winning submissions were discredited by facts that emerged subsequent to the conferral of the prizes."
On Oct. 13, Trump's attorneys Jeremy Bailie and R. Quincy Bird wrote to Marjorie Miller, the administrator of the Pulitzer Prize Board, concerning the board's July statement. In the letter, Trump's attorneys notified the board that "a defamatory statement pertaining to President Trump was and remains published on the Board's website since July 18, 2022."
The letter cautioned that "the Board, including its individual members, may be subject to suit and exposed to a judgment for damages, including punitive damages, for defamation," demanding not only that the statement be taken down by Oct.18, but that "a full and fair correction, apology, or retraction issued."
Additionally, Trump's attorneys noted that "rescinding the 2018 Pulitzer Prizes in National Reporting from their current recipients would necessarily be part of any full and fair attempt to right the wrong caused by the Board's conduct."
The letter advanced the claim made by Trump on Saturday: "The New York Times and The Washington Post were and are two of the foremost propagators of the Russia Collusion Hoax" and that it was "obvious that the 2018 Pulitzer Pries were intended to endorse the two mainstream media organizations' full, misleading body of work on the Russia Collusion Hoax."
A hostile Pulitzer board
The Pulitzer Prize Board, 2017-2018, which conferred the awards for investigations into disproven Russian interference included a number of fierce Trump critics, such as Gail Collins, an opinion columnist at the New York Times.
Two years before determining whether reporting on so-called Russian interference as it pertained to Trump's election and presidency were deserving of an award, Collins referred to the president as, "A dimwitted, meanspirited spawn embodying the nation's worst flaws, failings and nightmares" and suggested prior to the 2016 election that undecideds should vote for Clinton.
Eugene Robinson, the Pulitzer Prize Board's chair in 2018, is a columnist and associate editor at the Washington Post, which also happened to receive the award. He also happens to be an outspoken critic of the former president.
In the year he was on the board, Robinson accused Trump of "speaking the language of white supremacy," telling his Twitter followers to, "Get mad, and then get even: Vote against his enablers in November."
The chair of the Pulitzer Prize Board also accused Trump of being a "Putin fanboy."
Trump launches his own personal message board amid ongoing bans from major platforms
Former President Donald Trump has set up his own personal message board to share his views for all to see, as his months-long bans from sites such as Twitter and Facebook continue.
What are the details?
Fox News first reported Tuesday that the former president's new communication feed is dubbed "From the Desk of Donald J. Trump," which can be found at www.DonaldJTrump.com/desk.
The feed is a running list of undated statements from the former president, with the most recent attacking House Republican Conference Chairwoman Rep. Liz Cheney (R-Wyo.) — who continues to criticize Trump over the Jan. 6 storming of the Capitol.
"Heartwarming to read new polls on big-shot warmonger Liz Cheney of the great State of Wyoming," Trump wrote. "She is so low that her only chance would be if vast numbers of people run against her which, hopefully, won't happen. They never liked her much, but I say she'll never run in a Wyoming election again!"
Visitors to the page are unable to comment on the posts, but there are options for sharing the messages to Facebook or Twitter. However, Twitter did not allow the content to be shared when TheBlaze attempted to do so. Facebook did allow the posts to appear on its site.
There are also buttons where users can contribute money, and to sign up to be notified whenever Trump posts a new message.
According to The Washington Examiner, "The technology for the platform appears to come from Campaign Nucleus, a 'digital ecosystem made for efficiently managing political campaigns and organizations' that was initially developed by former campaign manager Brad Parscale."
"This is just a one-way communication," one source familiar with Trump's new messaging center told Fox. "This system allows Trump to communicate with his followers."
Trump adviser Jason Miller tweeted after the rollout, "President Trump's website is a great resource to find his latest statements and highlights from his first term in office, but this is not a new social media platform. We'll have additional information coming on that front in the very near future."
Trump was banned from Twitter, Facebook, Instagram, YouTube, and Snapchat following the Jan. 6 Capitol attack.
The former president's new message feed comes the day before Facebook's oversight board is set to announce whether his ban from the site will be permanent.
According to The Washington Post:
"The impending decision by the Oversight Board, a less than one-year-old body that describes itself as an "experiment" in the regulation of online speech, could be the most consequential decision ever regarding free speech on social media, according to experts. It could also alter the way that social media companies treat public figures going forward."
CNN launches personal attack at Kirstie Alley after she criticizes their reporting — and she fires back
Kirstie Alley took to Twitter Friday to voice criticism of CNN's reporting, and the network's communications account fired back with a personal attack on the actress that sparked strong reactions. But Alley hit right back.
What are the details?
"I now Know why my personal friends who walk around in SHEER TERROR of contracting Covid are simply CNN viewers!" Alley wrote. "I decided to watch CNN myself to get a their viewpoint and oh my God DID I EVER!!!! IF YOU TOO WANT TO LIVE IN TERROR WATCH CNN!! FEAR OF DYING IS THEIR MANTRA! OMG!"
CNN Communications replied, "Kirstie, you are welcome to change the channel - just like countless viewers did every time 'Veronica's Closet' came on TV. But don't downplay the loss of nearly 230K American lives. And please, wear a mask."
@kirstiealley Kirstie, you are welcome to change the channel - just like countless viewers did every time “Veronica… https://t.co/Nm80ivMvq1— CNN Communications (@CNN Communications)1604073478.0
The CNN public relations team was referring to a show Alley starred in in the late '90s. The actress, who supports President Donald Trump for reelection, then slammed the cable network for turning a blind eye to stories that might damage Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden.
"If only you paid as much attention to Joe Biden's alleged corrupt business dealings as a TV show that was rated top ten in 1997," Alley responded. "I guess you got that wrong too."
Some on social media joined CNN in accusing Alley of downplaying the coronavirus, which she denied, explaining, "Don't misinterpret my objection to CHRONIC FEAR MONGERING,WITH ZERO NEW SOLUTIONS TO AVOID THE PLAGUE, as non empathetic. That's a lie spread by Democrats who want to twist my words & make me seem unsympathetic. Chronic FEAR mongering doesn't help ANYONE physically or mentally."
'This is some grade-A juvenile stuff here.'
Others slammed CNN for the way the outlet responded to Alley.
Newsbusters managing editor Curtis Houck wrote, "This is some grade-A juvenile stuff here, CNN. But this is also very on-brand of you. No class. No ethics. It's all a game."
Republican Rep. Matt Gaetz (Fla.) also weighed in with a burn on CNN, tweeting, "Veronica's Closet had 35 million initial viewers. About 10 million more than the Mueller testimony. It ended its third season with 8 million viewers, down for sure. But still about 8x the viewership of CNN's top-rated show."