Tuesday, January 21, 2025

Journalists grapple with Trump's threats toward the U.S. media. How can free speech and truth remain the priority?

Trump has made continuous threats against U.S. media leaving reporters apprehensive about his upcoming term.
(Adobe Stock Images)

News organizations and journalists are experiencing unease as President Donald Trump reenters the White House, and what that means for them.

During a speech after being named TIME magazine's Person of the Year, Trump referenced the media and "threatened to use the power of his incoming administration to stifle free speech... [and] has made it clear that he will use the apparatus of government to go after his critics," wrote Rob Tornoe for E&P Magazine.

“The media is tamed down a little bit. They like us much better now, I think… If they don’t, then we’ll just have to take them on again, and we don’t want to do that,” said Trump at the New York Stock Exchange.

Writers are aware that their words carry weight, but now there is increasing concern that strong opinions will drive away readers or lead to backlash. Tornoe wrote, “The impact has been felt especially hard by the nation’s editorial cartoonists, who continue to dwindle,” including Mike Luckovich, who has drawn political cartoons for three decades and is a two-time Pulitzer Prize-winning cartoonist.

Besides Trump's threats, the news industry is also struggling with decreasing digital advertising rates, notable algorithm changes at Google, increasing impacts from artificial intelligence (AI) on journalism, and a lack of trust in institutions like news organizations, according to Tornoe.

E&P wrote that in an interview, Luckovich said that while visiting the Pentagon over 20 years ago multiple generals told him that besides whether or not they liked his cartoons they would defend his right to make his point. Luckovich told Tornoe, “To me, that is what America was all about — and I hope it still is.”

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