| Constantino Brumidi, Apotheosis of Washington, 1865Architect of the Capitol |
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If you thought the end of the Trump presidency might mean things would slow down in Washington, now is a good time to check the speedometer. Things are still moving at a clip. |
So to keep you up-to-date on the latest happenings in Washington and beyond, we've moved the On Politics newsletter to the evening, and loosened up the format a bit. You'll still be receiving a newsletter from me five days a week, but it will arrive around 7 p.m., not 7 a.m. (Your host, Lisa Lerer, will continue to send her weekly missive on Saturdays.) |
I'll still be writing an essay-style piece each Monday, diving into a timely topic. The rest of the week, the content will be more varied: a mix of news updates and analysis, Q. and A.'s with reporters, and other exclusive content. |
We'd love to know what you think, and if there are things you'd like to see more of going forward. Please don't hesitate to write to us at onpolitics@nytimes.com to offer feedback — Lisa and I always love to hear from readers! Now, with no further ado, let's get into what's happening today. |
'A shot across the bow' for conservative media |
With the Senate's impeachment trial starting oral arguments tomorrow, Donald Trump now faces the possibility of real consequences for his role in inciting the Capitol siege of Jan. 6. |
But the apparatus that fed him much of his power — the conservative news media — is facing a test of its own. This might ultimately have a much bigger impact on the future of American politics than anything that happens to Trump as an individual. |
In recent weeks, two voting-technology companies have each filed 10-figure lawsuits against Trump's lawyers and his allies in the media, claiming they spread falsehoods that did tangible harm. This comes amid an already-raging debate over whether to reform Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act, which prevents online companies from being held liable for the views expressed on their platforms. |
"The greatest consequence of the Trump presidency has been the weaponizing of disinformation and parallel dismantling of trust in the media," Mark McKinnon, a longtime political strategist and co-host of the Showtime political series "The Circus," told me in an email. |
"Unfortunately, it took the perpetration of the big lie that the election was a fraud, an insurrection at the Capitol, and almost destroying our democracy for someone to finally take action. But it appears to be working," McKinnon said. "Nothing like threatening the bottom line to get the desired attention." |
On Thursday, the voting-machine company Smartmatic filed a $2.7 billion lawsuit against Fox News, some of its prominent hosts and two lawyers who represented Trump, Sidney Powell and Rudy Giuliani. The suit accuses them of mounting a campaign of defamation by claiming that Smartmatic had been involved in an effort to throw the election to Joe Biden. That came on the heels of a similar $1.3 billion suit that Dominion Voting Systems brought against Giuliani the week before. |
The impact was immediate. Newsmax, an ultraconservative TV station that has expanded its popularity by lining up to the right of Fox News, cut off an interview with the MyPillow founder Mike Lindell last week as he attacked Dominion — something that commentators had done on the station many times before. Then, over the weekend, Fox Business sidelined Lou Dobbs, one of Trump's fiercest TV news defenders and a defendant named in the Smartmatic lawsuit. |
Jonathan Peters, a media law professor at the University of Georgia, said that unlike many libel lawsuits, the Dominion and Smartmatic cases do not appear to be publicity stunts; they have a firm legal basis. |
"In recent years it has been a boom time for nuisance claims against media organizations," Peters said, citing lawsuits brought against traditional news media by Trump allies like Representative Devin Nunes and Joe Arpaio. "The language at issue in the Dominion and Smartmatic litigation has involved statements of fact that would be provably false," he added. "The language at issue is not necessarily opinion, hyperbole or some other form of invective." |
Because the suits seem to be serious, Peters said, "this is a corrective for companies and individuals being sued — and for those not being sued it is a shot across the bow." |
But in a media landscape permanently altered by polarization, and by Trump's indifference to facts, Fox News and other conservative broadcasters face significant competition from popular YouTubers and Twitter users, who have much more leeway to express potentially harmful views. |
Angelo Carusone, the president of Media Matters, a left-leaning group, said this leaves Fox News fighting a two-front war. |
"They're getting attacked by their own people," he said. "If you're a conservative channel or host, you need to pick away at Fox News." |
Carusone pinpoints spring 2017 as a moment of symbolic transition. That's when the Fox News host Sean Hannity began embracing a series of baseless claims tying Hillary Clinton to the death of a Democratic aide, claims that Trump had co-signed. "In August of 2016, Sean Hannity was chastising conservative media figures for promoting the Seth Rich conspiracy theories," Carusone said. "And yet in May of 2017, Hannity is launching his own investigation into who in Hillary Clinton's campaign murdered Seth Rich. There is no clearer moment of when they shifted their posture." |
Carusone said that Hannity's evolution was goaded by Trump's ability to use social media to promote unproven, reckless arguments — and by social media companies' ability to give him a platform without themselves facing repercussions for his speech, thanks to Section 230. "Trump increasingly was able to leapfrog Fox News, in terms of building a relationship to Fox News's own audience," he said. "So Fox News lost the keys to the gate." |
But in the past month, Trump has lost his set of keys, too. He was kicked off Twitter and Facebook after the Capitol riot, and since leaving the White House he has been as quiet as a church mouse. In his absence, Fox News has begun to focus more on attacking Biden and other Democrats on the news of the day than on importing conspiracy theories from online. |
Going forward, Carusone said, "I think they'll try to soften some of the content on the edges, and to lean heavier into the partisan attacks and less on the right-wing fever swamp fantasies and narratives." |
Proponents of media reform say that this moment presents a once-in-a-generation opportunity to rethink government policy related to online speech in particular. Ellen Goodman, a Rutgers Law School professor who focuses on information policy, said that maintaining a healthy marketplace of ideas was crucial to democracy. |
"If this is a moment of radical, 'Build Back Better' adjustments, and a revival of the middle class, what would the democracy-building part of that look like?" she said. Goodman proposed instituting taxes or regulations that would "make the surveillance-capitalism model less attractive," preventing social media companies from microtargeting audiences in the interest of selling them products. |
Jonathan Zittrain, a Harvard Law School professor who studies digital media, sees a sea change coming. In the early decades of the internet, he said, most legal discussions were guided by a question of "rights," particularly the right to free speech under the First Amendment. But in recent years, a new interest in what he called "the public health framework" has taken hold. |
"Misinformation and extremism — particularly extremism that's tied to violence — can result in harm," Zittrain said. "Given that there are compelling things in both the rights framework and the health framework, there's going to be a balance struck." |
Sway: Should Big Tech stay out of politics? |
On today's episode of "Sway," Brad Smith, the president of Microsoft, told The Times's Kara Swisher about what he calls "the stages of antitrust grief," and which stage each of the big tech companies, including Apple, Facebook and Amazon, are in. You can listen here. |
How Trump's impeachment trial will unfold |
The second Senate impeachment trial of Donald Trump will open on Tuesday, just over a month after the Jan. 6 assault on the Capitol that the House has charged him with inciting. Senate leaders were still haggling on Monday over final details, but they were closing in on a plan for an exceptionally speedy proceeding that could conclude in less than half the time of Trump's first trial. |
Monday was the final day for pretrial motions, and Trump's lawyers laid out his defense in a 78-page brief submitted to the Senate, denying that he was responsible for the attack and arguing that in any case, an ex-president could not be tried by the Senate. |
In their own filing, the House Democrats who are prosecuting him reiterated their allegation that Trump "willfully" incited the riot and insisted that he was subject to a Senate impeachment trial. |
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Is there anything you think we're missing? Anything you want to see more of? We'd love to hear from you. Email us at onpolitics@nytimes.com. |
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