There is a strategic calculation to Trump’s war on the press.
During a G7 summit breakfast, President Trump made remarks to the media about the US-China trade war and the US economy.
For journalists, the best and only response to President Trump’s war on the media is to keep reporting the news, and analyzing it thoroughly, John Cassidy writes.
Participation comes after a push organized by the Boston Globe to run coordinated editorials denouncing Trump’s attacks on the media
This week’s final, complete confirmation of the El Mozote massacre 38 years ago holds critical lessons about the Trumpist war on the media today.
The president puts on a big show of assaulting his “opposition” in the news media. But inside the White House, it’s a different story.
Also known as the 'Aleppo evil' or, to give it its proper name, cutaneous leishmaniasis, it causes painful lesions, like the one pictured, which can lead to permanent disfigurement.
Coverage of the war on Yemen is rare enough that it magnifies the importance of mistakes and omissions in the few articles that do reach Western audiences.
Most of the news media is at war with Donald Trump, and rightly so. First, journalists should always be at war with the governments they cover.
After defections by two of his closest allies, Trump “spent the weekend calling people and screaming,” a former White House official says.
David Greene talks to Marjorie Pritchard, deputy managing editor of The Boston Globe, about the paper's call for a coordinated editorial response to President Trump's attacks on the press.
"The Presidency of Donald J. Trump" offers a wealth of valuable perspectives — but fails to measure the danger
For many Americans, Russian hacking remains a story about the 2016 election. But there is another story taking shape.
“I’m not running against crooked Hillary, I’m running against the crooked media,” said Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump Saturday evening as a thunderstorm roared outside his rally in Fairfield, CT. “That’s what I’m running against," he repeated, according to the Hill. "I’m not running ag...
How America's largest local TV owner turned its news anchors into soldiers in Trump's war on the media: https://t.co/iLVtKRQycL
When it comes to war, we shouldn't expect balance from mainstream news outlets: the corporate media has never met a war it didn't like.
The Chemical Safety and Hazard Investigation Board, which looks into some of the nation’s biggest industrial disasters, is without enough voting members.