Donald Trump and his campaign have waged an aggressive campaign against fact-checking in recent months, pushing TV networks, journalism organizations and others to abandon the practice if they hope to interact with Trump.
Trump nearly backed out of an August interview with a group of Black journalists after learning they planned to fact-check his claims. The following month, he and his allies repeatedly complained about the fact-checking that occurred during his debate with Vice President Kamala Harris, berating journalists and news executives in the middle of the televised debate.
And this month, Trump declined to sit down for an interview with CBSâ€
Campaign advisers also expressly asked CBS News to forgo fact checking in its vice-presidential debate with Trumpâ€
The moves are the latest example of Trumpâ€
Lucas Graves, a journalism and mass communications professor at the University of Wisconsin at Madison, said that publicly chafing at fact-checking has become a form of tribalism among some Republicans.
“Within the political establishment on the right, it is now considered quite legitimate — and quite legitimate to say publicly and openly — that you disapprove of fact-checking,â€� said Lucas, author of “Deciding Whatâ€
The Washington Post Fact Checker team tallied that by the end of Trumpâ€
In August, Trump had agreed to appear at a National Association of Black Journalists gathering, where three of the groupâ€
NABJ president Ken Lemon described a tense scene backstage as Trumpâ€
Lemon said he spoke with three Trump aides — who at one point called to confer with someone not at the event — about their objections to fact-checking as the audience waited.
At one point, Lemon said he became convinced Trump was ultimately going to back out of the interview over his fact-checking concerns, so Lemon prepared remarks to go out and explain the cancellation to the crowd. But in the end, Trump took part in the interview, making headlines by falsely suggesting that Vice President Kamala Harris had only recently decided to identify as Black.
“It was a very revealing moment where we got to hear him answer questions, and we were shocked at what some of the answers were,� Lemon said.
Trump officials blamed the delay in taking the stage on technical audio issues.
“Hereâ€
Harris, too, has taken a cautious approach to interviews, largely eschewing rigorous policy questioners for lower-stakes venues and having her advisers, at times, try to prescreen questions. Her blitz this week of unscripted media settings hewed to friendly questioners, including Howard Stern of Sirius XM, CBSâ€
One Trump adviser, speaking on the condition of anonymity to describe the campaignâ€
But Harris does not misstate the truth regularly, as Trump does, and she has also not protested being fact-checked. And unlike Trump, she sat down for a wide-ranging interview with “60 Minutes� that aired last week.
As part of Harrisâ€
“A week ago, Trump backed out,� CBS correspondent Scott Pelley explained. “The campaign offered shifting explanations. First, it complained that we would fact-check the interview. We fact-check every story. Later, Trump said he needed an apology for his interview in 2020.�
Pelley went on to explain that the 2020 incident for which Trump requested an apology had never occurred.
Campaign advisers acknowledged there were discussions with CBS over fact-checking, and the campaign objected to the network wanting to cut into the interview to fact-check.
The two debates — first with President Joe Biden and then with Harris after Biden dropped out — proved another point of contention. Trumpâ€
During the debate between Trump and Biden, CNN publicly stated in advance that the moderators would not fact-check, instead leaving that to the candidates.
Before the second debate, Jason Miller, a spokesman for the Trump campaign, said the team was told by an ABC journalist that similar to the CNN debate, there would be no fact checks from the moderators. However, a copy of the ABC News debate rules, obtained by The Post, did not put any limitations on fact checking.
Nonetheless, Trump and his allies were furious with ABC for pointedly fact-checking Trump live during his debate with Harris. At one point, after Trump falsely claimed that some Democrats support executing babies after birth, moderator Linsey Davis noted, “There is no state in this country where it is legal to kill a baby after itâ€
At another point — after Trump repeated the false and baseless claim that Haitian immigrants in Springfield, Ohio, were abducting and eating their neighborsâ€
Trumpâ€
The network declined to comment.
“Everyone who watched the ABC debate agreed that it was a 3-on-1 fight with 2 moderators who wrongly ‘fact-checkedâ€
Harris spokesman Kevin Munoz responded: “You have to lie to be fact-checked, and only one person on that stage was telling lie after lie.�
By the time Vance was preparing for a CBS debate with Harrisâ€
In meetings with network executives, Vanceâ€
However, at one point, moderator Margaret Brennan corrected a comment Vance had made about the “illegal immigrantsâ€� that he claimed where overwhelming Springfield, Ohio, noting that the cityâ€
“Margaret, the rules were that you guys werenâ€
The exchange was brief, but by then, the Trump-Vance ticketâ€
“You know, Nora, itâ€