
The US’s largest television stations split on whether to air Donald Trump’s White House address live on Thursday night, which was heavy on unproven accusations about the integrity of the 2020 election won by Joe Biden.
While CNN, ABC and NBC chose not to air the speech live, CBS, Fox News and MS Now (formerly MSNBC) aired at least large portions of the speech live. ABC did not air the speech as a must-run broadcast, but some station affiliates – including the Washington DC station owned by right-leaning broadcaster Sinclair – chose to air the speech.
Instead of airing the speech as a special report, like CBS did, NBC chose to continue airing the previously scheduled nature documentary show The Americas. (CBS was scheduled to air the sitcom Georgie & Mandy’s First Marriage.)
MS Now chose to air about half of the speech despite warnings from Jen Psaki, the network’s 9pm host and former Biden White House press secretary, who told viewers that it would be unlike a traditional White House address.
“When you’re in the White House, these are selective moments a president typically takes to speak to the American public,” she said. “We are not in normal times, as you all know. And this speech is not going to be about this country, and it is not going to be about the American people and the challenges people face.”
Trump’s remarks focused on “the deep state” and efforts by China to “meddle” in the US’s election system.
About 15 minutes into Trump’s comments, Psaki cut into the speech and pushed back on his assertions about the electoral system.
CBS also cut into Trump’s speech just more than 20 minutes in, bringing on Tony Dokoupil, the Evening News anchor, and Major Garrett, the chief White House correspondent.
Before the speech, Dokoupil explained the network’s decision to air a large portion of it.
“It’s a speech expected to address safety and security of American elections, a topic, of course, that the president has talked a lot about for years now,” he said. “At times, almost constantly, and honestly, much of what the president has said on this topic has been false. Most notably, of course, the claim that he won the 2020 election, when of course he did not. Because of this, there is an argument that it’s irresponsible to air the president’s speech tonight. But this speech will be made. It will be news. And it’s our job to cover the news. And so we are.”
Rather than airing the speech, CNN hosted a panel discussion featuring experts from across the political spectrum. The network’s on-air graphic cast doubt on Trump’s remarks, telling viewers: “Trump Gives Address On Elections After Years of False Claims.”
Kaitlan Collins, the network’s 9pm anchor, told viewers that her team would be keeping an eye on the speech despite not airing it. “We’ll be monitoring what the president says tonight, as we always do, but aren’t taking it live, given the president has a well-documented history of saying blatantly false things about elections,” she said.
While ABC did not air the speech across all of its stations, it broadcast it on the network’s streaming service ABC News Live and ABC News Radio. Still, Trump called out ABC and NBC for not airing the speech live and suggested that they should lose their license to broadcast, a common broadside he has used against networks he dislikes.
“They and others in the media are part of a plot. They want to continue this fraud for whatever reason,” Trump said. “They want to protect the radical left.”
Like ABC, NBC aired the speech live on its streaming service and broadcast a special report after it concluded.
The news that NBC and ABC would not air the speech live also drew pushback from Trump’s pugnacious communications director, Steven Cheung.
“Cowards. NBC and ABC don’t want you to hear the truth. All they want to do is hide the facts from YOU,” he wrote earlier in a post on X. “Tune in @WhiteHouse at 9:00pm EDT, where we always get bigger ratings than any of the networks.”
While Sean Hannity, the Fox News host, said it was “pretty unheard of” for networks to not air primetime presidential addresses, there is a history of networks choosing not to air speeches that are viewed as political in nature.
View original source — The Guardian ↗



