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Comey Firing Provides Bright Dividing Line for Media Coverage | Comey Firing Provides Bright Dividing Line for Media Coverage |
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On CNN, the legal journalist Jeffrey Toobin was in red-alert mode, denouncing President Trump’s firing of the F.B.I. director, James B. Comey, as “a grotesque abuse of power” and “the kind of thing that goes on in non-democracies.” | On CNN, the legal journalist Jeffrey Toobin was in red-alert mode, denouncing President Trump’s firing of the F.B.I. director, James B. Comey, as “a grotesque abuse of power” and “the kind of thing that goes on in non-democracies.” |
Over on Fox News, the mood was more sanguine — even celebratory. “This was overdue, and everyone in Washington knows that,” Tucker Carlson declared at the top of his broadcast before introducing a series of guests who echoed his excitement. | |
The nation’s political divide has been on full display in the news media in the hours since Mr. Comey’s abrupt ejection from his post on Tuesday evening — and the lines are brighter than ever. By Wednesday, the left-leaning HuffPost featured a one-word, all-capital headline: “Nixonian.” The right-leaning Breitbart News approvingly declared Mr. Trump’s move “the latest in a political outsider’s crusade against entrenched Washington.” | |
In an interview that dominated its home page on Wednesday, Breitbart quoted a former assistant director of the bureau, James Kallstrom, saying of Mr. Comey, “He threw the reputation of the F.B.I. under the bus.” Mr. Kallstrom was also a guest on Fox News on Tuesday, telling the anchor Martha MacCallum that Mr. Comey “danced with the devil.” | |
Rachel Maddow’s monologue on MSNBC invoked the firing of Archibald Cox, President Richard M. Nixon’s special prosecutor during the Watergate scandal, one of many comparisons to Nixon’s so-called Saturday Night Massacre in the traditional news media. She then raised serious concerns that Mr. Trump was interfering with an investigation into his campaign’s ties to Russia. | |
Sean Hannity of Fox News expressed deep gratitude for the president’s action — “Comey Fired!!! Finally,” he posted on Twitter — and he said on the air that he hoped Mr. Comey’s replacement would reopen an investigation into Hillary Clinton’s emails. Fox News initially reported that Mr. Comey had resigned before correcting itself minutes later to make clear he was dismissed. | |
The Fox News worldview was echoed on Wednesday in the White House briefing room, where Sarah Huckabee Sanders, the deputy press secretary, defended Mr. Trump’s decision and denounced Mr. Comey as having “shown a lot of missteps and mistakes.” | The Fox News worldview was echoed on Wednesday in the White House briefing room, where Sarah Huckabee Sanders, the deputy press secretary, defended Mr. Trump’s decision and denounced Mr. Comey as having “shown a lot of missteps and mistakes.” |
Ms. Sanders was substituting for her boss, Sean Spicer, the White House press secretary, who had said late Tuesday that he would be on previously scheduled Navy Reserve duty for the rest of the week. Ms. Sanders, in only her second time at the lectern, was smooth and assured under pressure, mixing her answers with a few deft jokes about her daughter’s birthday. | Ms. Sanders was substituting for her boss, Sean Spicer, the White House press secretary, who had said late Tuesday that he would be on previously scheduled Navy Reserve duty for the rest of the week. Ms. Sanders, in only her second time at the lectern, was smooth and assured under pressure, mixing her answers with a few deft jokes about her daughter’s birthday. |
Still, she drew some criticism for saying that Mr. Comey had committed “atrocities” while leading the F.B.I., and White House reporters were clearly skeptical about her explanation that Mr. Trump had merely asked Justice Department officials to list their concerns about Mr. Comey in writing, rather than explicitly ordering the director’s dismissal. | |
Into this ideological breach came a bracing report on Wednesday from the Pew Research Center that said that Democrats’ and Republicans’ attitudes toward the news media’s role in society were more divided than at any point in the last 30 years. | |
About 89 percent of Democrats said the news media played a watchdog role in holding political leaders to account. About 42 percent of Republicans said the same. That gap — 47 percentage points — was the widest ever recorded in the Pew survey, which stretches back more than three decades. | |
The gap is also a sharp contrast from only a year ago. In the first months of 2016, 74 percent of Democrats and 77 percent of Republicans agreed on the watchdog role of the news media, Pew said. | The gap is also a sharp contrast from only a year ago. In the first months of 2016, 74 percent of Democrats and 77 percent of Republicans agreed on the watchdog role of the news media, Pew said. |
The presidential campaign season and the early days of the Trump administration seem to have fueled this divide. (The Pew survey, conducted March 13 to 27 among 4,151 adults online, has a margin of sampling error of plus or minus 2.7 percentage points.) |