J.D. Vance (left) was selected to join Donald Trump's presidential campaign as his running mate. (Courtesy of @DrSchwertner via X)
**FILE** J.D. Vance (left) was selected to join Donald Trump's presidential campaign as his running mate. (Courtesy of @DrSchwertner via X)

In a revealing revelation, it appears that the mainstream media may be bending to the will of Donald Trump.

Multiple prominent news outlets, including Politico, The New York Times and The Washington Post, have reportedly been handed confidential material from within the Trump campaign, including a detailed vetting report on J.D. Vance, Trumpโ€™s vice presidential pick. Yet, instead of reporting on the contents, these outlets have chosen to keep the information under wraps.

The Associated Press noted that the decision is even more startling given the mediaโ€™s aggressive coverage of the 2016 election, where hacked emails from Hillary Clintonโ€™s campaign were relentlessly published and scrutinized. 

“Back then, there was no hesitation to dive into the details of the leaked communications, despite the clear involvement of Russian operatives,” The Associated Press noted.ย 

But in 2024, when the Trump campaignโ€™s internal documents land in their laps, the same outlets are suddenly squeamish, raising serious questions about their integrity and motivations.

Politico acknowledged receiving emails from a mysterious figure named โ€œRobertโ€ that included a 271-page campaign document on J.D. Vance and a partial vetting report on Florida Sen. Marco Rubio, who was also considered for the vice presidential slot. Both Politico and The Washington Post confirmed the authenticity of the documents but have chosen to focus on the potential origins of the leak rather than the damning content within.

The Trump campaign, predictably, has spun this to its advantage, claiming โ€” without evidence โ€” that Iranian operatives hacked the campaign. The timing of this claim, coming on the heels of a Microsoft report detailing an Iranian attempt to breach the email of a former senior advisor to a presidential campaign, raises more questions than it answers. Yet, the mainstream media seems content to take this claim at face value, echoing the Trump campaignโ€™s narrative rather than challenging it.

The Times, which has refused to discuss why it chose not to publish the Trump campaignโ€™s internal documents, is now being criticized for what appears to be a double standard.

Critics argue that this newfound restraint is nothing more than the media protecting Trump or, at the very least, avoiding the kind of backlash that might come from publishing unflattering material about him. 

Jesse Eisinger, senior reporter at ProPublica, slammed the outletsโ€™ decision, telling The Associated Press, โ€œOnce the material is verified as authentic, the public has a right to know whatโ€™s inside. Itโ€™s not the mediaโ€™s job to shield a political campaign from embarrassment โ€” especially when that campaign has been less than transparent.โ€

Eisingerโ€™s sentiment echoes the frustration of many who see the mediaโ€™s reluctance as a betrayal of its duty to inform the public. โ€œThe media is supposed to be a watchdog, not a lapdog,โ€ said one social media commentator, capturing the growing disillusionment with mainstream news outlets.

The FBI has confirmed that it is investigating the matter, but the Trump campaign and the media have not been transparent, leaving the public in the dark. While itโ€™s possible that foreign interference is at play, itโ€™s equally plausible that this is just another example of the Trump campaignโ€™s mastery of manipulation and the mediaโ€™s complicity in it.

As the 2024 election nears, most argue that the stakes could not be higher and that the mediaโ€™s role in shaping public perception is more critical than ever. By choosing not to publish these documents, The New York Times, Politico, and The Washington Post have not only abdicated their responsibility but also set a dangerous precedent. In an era where misinformation reigns supreme, their silence speaks volumes.

โ€œIf the media starts picking and choosing what truths the public is allowed to see, then weโ€™re no longer living in a democracy โ€” weโ€™re living in something much darker,” a veteran journalist stated.

Stacy M. Brown is a senior writer for The Washington Informer and the senior national correspondent for the Black Press of America. Stacy has more than 25 years of journalism experience and has authored...

Leave a comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *