Globe | A central pillar of President Trump’s politics is a sustained assault on
the free press. Journalists are not classified as fellow Americans, but
rather “the enemy of the people.” This relentless assault on the free
press has dangerous consequences. We asked editorial boards
from around the country – liberal and conservative, large and small –
to join us today to address this fundamental threat in their own words.
There was once broad, bipartisan, intergenerational agreement in the
United States that the press played this important role. Yet that view
is no longer shared by many Americans. “The news media is the enemy of
the American people,” is a sentiment endorsed by 48 percent of
Republicans surveyed this month by Ipsos polling firm. That poll is not
an outlier. One published this week found 51 percent of Republicans
considered the press “the enemy of the people rather than an important
part of democracy.”
“The press was to serve the governed, not the governors,” Supreme Court
Justice Hugo Black wrote in 1971. Would that it were still the case. Lies are antithetical to an informed citizenry, responsible for
self-governance. The greatness of America is dependent on the role of a
free press to speak the truth to the powerful. To label the press “the
enemy of the people” is as un-American as it is dangerous to the civic
compact we have shared for more than two centuries.
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