Critical Rights and Rule-of-Law Concern

First-Term Attacks on Press Freedom: 'Enemy of the People' and Institutional Delegitimization

Trump used the phrase 'enemy of the people' to describe mainstream media more than 30 times, echoing language used by Stalin, Mao, and other authoritarian leaders. His administration attempted to ban reporters from press briefings, challenged broadcast licenses in apparent retaliation for critical coverage, encouraged legal changes to make it easier to sue journalists, and called for investigations of reporters. International press freedom organizations documented the global impact: Trump's rhetoric gave cover to authoritarian leaders from Turkey to the Philippines to justify imprisoning journalists.

Overview

"Enemy of the people" is not a neutral phrase. It was the phrase Stalin used to justify sending millions to the Gulag; the phrase Mao used during the Cultural Revolution to justify mass persecution; the phrase used in authoritarian regimes to designate those who could be imprisoned, exiled, or killed for the crime of speaking inconvenient truths to power.

Donald Trump used it to describe CNN and The New York Times.

Over the course of his first term, Trump invoked the phrase more than 30 times. The cumulative effect was not merely rhetorical. The Committee to Protect Journalists — an organization that usually focuses on journalists imprisoned in Russia, China, and Turkey — for the first time in its history issued public warnings about press freedom in the United States.

The Authoritarian Echo

The most direct damage was not to the American press, which retained its institutional protections. It was to press freedom globally.

Reporters Without Borders documented a specific pattern: authoritarian governments cited Trump's "enemy of the people" rhetoric when justifying crackdowns on their own journalists. Leaders in Turkey, the Philippines, Egypt, and elsewhere told international critics that if the American president called his own press enemies, the criticism of their more systematic suppressions rang hollow. Trump's rhetoric provided global diplomatic cover for the imprisonment of journalists.

Concrete Attacks

Beyond rhetoric, the first-term press attacks had concrete manifestations. The White House attempted to bar major outlets from briefings. It threatened NBC's broadcast license in apparent retaliation for critical reporting. It revoked a reporter's credentials and required a court order to restore them. Trump and his allies repeatedly called for legal changes to make it easier to sue journalists, including relaxing the actual-malice standard that protects reporting on public figures.

None of these measures ultimately succeeded in their stated purpose. But their cumulative effect on the relationship between the executive branch and the independent press was documented by every major press freedom organization: the United States, during the Trump first term, moved in the direction of the countries it had historically criticized.

Timeline

Sequence of events

  1. First 'enemy of the people' tweet

    Trump tweets that 'FAKE NEWS media' — specifically naming NBC, ABC, CBS, CNN, and the New York Times — is 'the enemy of the American People.' It is the first presidential use of the phrase since the McCarthy era; the phrase's specific association with Stalinist purges and Maoist cultural revolution propaganda is immediately noted by historians.

  2. CNN, NYT, others barred from White House gaggle

    The White House bars CNN, the New York Times, the Los Angeles Times, Politico, and BuzzFeed from an informal press briefing (gaggle) with press secretary Sean Spicer — the first exclusion of major outlets from a White House briefing in recent memory.

  3. Trump threatens NBC broadcast license

    After NBC reports on a story about Trump wanting a tenfold increase in nuclear weapons, Trump tweets: 'With all of the Fake News coming out of NBC and the Networks, at what point is it appropriate to challenge their License? Bad for country!' First Amendment scholars and broadcast law experts note the threat is itself a potential First Amendment violation.

  4. CNN's Jim Acosta credentials revoked

    The White House revokes CNN reporter Jim Acosta's press credentials after a contentious press conference, claiming he placed his hands on a White House intern in a widely-disputed characterization of video footage. A federal judge orders the credentials restored 12 days later, finding the revocation violated due process.

  5. Trump calls for New York Times investigation

    After the Times publishes a story on Trump's tax losses, Trump calls the story 'treason' and suggests the government should investigate the journalists involved — one of multiple instances of Trump suggesting legal action against reporters for critical coverage.

  6. Trump threatens to prorogue Congress to prevent journalist oversight

    During the COVID-19 pandemic, Trump's hostility toward journalists covering pandemic failures intensifies; he and his allies discuss using presidential authority to declare Congress in recess specifically to prevent oversight hearings that might feature critical journalists as witnesses.

Sources

  1. Trump's assault on the press — one year review — Committee to Protect Journalists
  2. 2020 Press Freedom Index — United States — Reporters Without Borders (RSF)
  3. 'Enemy of the People': Trump Breaks With Decades of Presidential Rhetoric — The New York Times
  4. Trump threatens to revoke NBC's broadcast license — The Washington Post
  5. AP analysis: Trump's 'enemy of the people' attacks echo authoritarianism — The Associated Press

Verification

Publication provenance

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