Home » So, why did Trump have a meeting with the press and then excoriate them?

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So, why did Trump have a meeting with the press and then excoriate them? — 43 Comments

  1. I choose 5 & 6. Why? Because I want to believe that Trump is a master of baiting the MSM with the motive of exposing them for the biased, dishonest journalists they are.

    I have, since the 2008 campaign, encouraged the GOP candidates to employ a media quick reaction team to deal with lies, innuendoes, rumors, and character assassinations by the MSM. Trump is the first one to actually use this strategy. I never realized that the quick reaction team might be the candidate him/herself. If nothing else, the Trump candidacy and election has exposed the MSM for what they are – the communications arm of the Democrat party – not as the represent themselves – as fearless seekers of truth and speakers of truth to power.

    In his ability to stand up to the MSM, Trump is doing a great service to the nation.

  2. 5,6,7 I say.

    He WANTS to have a foil.

    For Adolf it was Jewish-Bolshevism.

    For Trump it’s going to be the MSM and the billionaires.

    This time around history will play as farce.

  3. 6 & 7.

    Trump is playing 3D chess.

    David Remnick! He’s Barack’s best bud and a total Dem shill. I don’t believe a word he writes.

  4. 1,2,6

    1. Conway said it didn’t happen the way it was reported.

    2. Trump speaks what is on his mind. In the interview with Woodward, he said at one point that sometimes he’s too harsh. This is just the way of New York.

    6. Because he’s the puppet master.

  5. #7 is the closest, but #5 and 6 are also true.

    And I think the initial leak came from Trump himself just to goad the morons like Remnick.

  6. And with the release of the YouTube videos, Trump is telling the media that he doesn’t need them, and he is right.

  7. I think it’s 5-7, but what’s interesting to me is how his approach with the press contrasts with his post-election conciliatory approach to Hillary, Obama and even Mitt Romney. Trump seems to think there is some utility in mollifying these people (even if only by making him look magnanimous), but none to be gained cozying up to the press.

    Basically, he seems to view the press the way the rest of the world views Obama’s America: harmless as an enemy but treacherous as an ally. Better to keep the media all negative all the time, rather than start treating him fairly and regain a bit of credibility.

  8. I like 5-7, but favor 7. Sympathy for the poor press? Couldn’t happen to a better bunch of folks. 🙂

  9. Looks like 5, 6 & 7 from my perspective.

    It appears that Trump is a master at leveraging the hatred the press brings to the party to make them turn him into a sympathetic character to his ever enlarging base.

    If this is true and not just blessed coincidence, he’s inside their OODA loop, and we’re in for a show. The attractiveness of his prospective appointments to his base (I’m not his base, but I’m pretty pleased so far…) and the emetic reaction of the left to them will make for some interesting viewing over the coming weeks.

    Every day brings something new.

  10. 5,6 & 7 here.

    IMO Trump understands the press better than they understand themselves. When one lives in a bubble, one becomes inured to the circumstances of that bubble, i.e., one fails to notice the most obvious things. This is natural to human behavior. So much more so for the press.

    As you know, it has long been my contention that Trump’s campaign was a campaign against the media as much as (if not more so) than a campaign against Hillary. This hasn’t ended yet because I’m certain he understands that they intend to pick at him like a scab over the next four years.

    IMO even his Youtube video of his first 100 days is an attempt to neuter and diminish them by bypassing the traditional press conference.

  11. Any combination that suggests purposeful.

    I am cautiously, timidly, coming around to believing that I underrated Trump in many ways. Overly thin skinned and reactive would probably be high on the list.

    With due credit to his team–which he chose of course–he obviously understood the country better than most poltiical professionals, and is a much more strategic thinker than credited.

    But, who knows? We are a ways yet from learning how he will govern. He can do things now that would not play at all after he is President. As I indicated, I hope he understands that, and accordingly is using this time to establish boundaries for those who will oppose him. In other words in the vernacular of the military, that he is in the “prepare the battlefield” stage.

  12. BTW, in my opinion, 5,6,&7 do not exclude 1. It would not surprise me that having spoken sternly to them, they took great umbrage at being criticized at all.

  13. Yes, #1 can’t be discounted, but the first report was in NYPost, which is why I think it was Trump that leaked it.

  14. 5-7.

    The media hounded Trump continually before the election, and continued to do so after the election. There was no point in hoping they would become fairer after this meeting. There is no point for Trump to play Mr. Nice Guy with the media. The media has never played Mr. Nice Guy- or even Mr. Tough but Fair Guy- with a Republican President in my lifetime, while most Republican Presidents have tried to be Mr. Nice Guy with the media.

    Perhaps when the press had 70% public approval, it made sense to play Mr. Nice Guy with the media, but given the blatant partisanship of the media and the low opinion the public has of the media, there is no point to do so. I rather like his being nasty to the media. 🙂

    I doubt that the media will try to become fairer until they receive stronger indications that their partisanship is hurting their bottom line. For example, how many people will cancel NYT subscriptions as a result of NYT bias? Not many, I fear. I am going to watch some TV news shows to find out who pays for their advertising, and write nasty letters to the advertisers.

    It was interesting that Trump had left an opening for developing a relationship with B.E.T.

  15. Also, I wouldn’t be surprised to find that Trump has the entire episode recorded, too.

  16. I think the more interesting question right now is why Trump called the meeting in the first place only to excoriate them during it. So I’ve prepared a little survey for you, with a choice of answers

    I vote 5 and 6 too.

    Might as well fan the flames now, and get it into the open. He knows there will be no “honeymoon”.

    As he said earlier in another context: what have you got to lose?

    Funny that they even showed up.

    There was a dog loose in the neighborhood not long ago. It roamed around invisibly mostly but would race up in the dark barking behind you and snarling, as you reached in the trunk of the car to take a package out.

    A pathetic animal which excited pity one moment and a desire to kill it the next. It begged and menaced in almost the same second: whining outside a door for a handout, snarling and barking seconds later if shown any pity and tossed a bone.

    Don’t know why a discussion of the press brought it to mind just now.

  17. 9) He was angry, wanted to give ’em hell, and didn’t care about the consequences. If the consequences make him mad, he’ll give ’em more hell, etc. Why should this be complicated?

  18. By the way. I actually have no real idea if he is deliberately engaging in provocative acts in order to set up a conditioned reflex response in the press, or if he has a narrative he is seeking to drive, or if he is just the prima donna I thought he was – instinctively giving in to impulses which have usually worked for him before.

    Certainly an interesting development.

    How much Machiavelli versus how much unplanned tantrum?

    Should be interesting to see how it plays out.

  19. “Basically, he seems to view the press the way the rest of the world views Obama’s America: harmless as an enemy but treacherous as an ally.” [Conrad O’Connor @ 2:20]

    I think this is a brilliant insight especially as a critique of the Obama administration.

  20. “How much Machiavelli versus how much unplanned tantrum?

    Should be interesting to see how it plays out.” [DNW @ 2:49]

    I agree, we are in for an interesting four years. I have reached the belief, however, that Trump is consistently “misunderestimated” especially by the press, and I think he counts on that.

  21. Trump is quite an strategist who likes to play the fool. Otherwise, he wouldn’t have won.

    Right now, what he needs is to get rid of the press. Press conferences can be handled using internet and new media like Breitbart or The Blaze, or bloggers and blog-journalists like Paul Joseph Watson or you, Neo. Mass media are not really needed anymore.

    But for that he needs to keep the relationship with the Press in a state of conflict until he takes charge. This way, he’ll have the excuse to dismiss them.

    Look the outcome: Trump kept the conflict with press alive, and however, it was the press who fed it. Win-win.

  22. No matter how the press will spin it, it will end with an egg on its face. They have no plausible path to restore their shattered credibility.

  23. I vote for Machiavelli, or rather Machiavelli, Richelieu, Bonaparte, Talleyrand and Bismark wrapped in one. The man is a political genius playing a dunce when it suit him.

  24. Let me propose the Czervik Rule, named after Rodney Dangerfield’s character in Caddyshack. If you want to know what Trump is going to do, or why he did something, think in terms of Al Czervik. He was rich, and had no class, and went everywhere that only the elite could go, and acted like Rodney Dangerfield. The Republican candidates and Clinton and the press are all playing Ted Knight – and nobody roots for Ted Knight.

    So, why did Trump conduct the meeting the way he did? Someone told him he was supposed to meet with the press during his transition. So he did, and acted just like Al Czervik would have. The Czervik Rule: get used to seeing me write about it.

  25. It is not a love. It is an awe, in all its meanings, included gloomy ones. He has a hand of destiny over him. A manifest destiny.

  26. As was mentioned by many serious people, the whole Trump affair has overtones of a Greek tragedy unfolding before our eyes. Or of some other ancient mythology, Scandinavian, may be. Odin, Thor, Loki and Gé¶tterdé¤mmerung.

  27. I’m torn between five and seven. Yes a lot of ordinary Americans were and still are P’Oed at how the national press basically made themselves Hillary’s stenographers and lickspittles. An epic ass-chewing was richly deserved, and news of it warmed the cockles of my cold, cynical heart.

    Set a trap for them to walk into – the national media thinking that they could just waltz in and be forgiven, because they ARE THE PRESS and essential to any administration – I think someone on his staff, of not DT himself is twisty enough to sit back and let them damn themselves.

  28. 5 and 7 are so close I can’t pick a favorite.
    6 isn’t far behind.

    People keep saying that trump is thin-skinned. All he does is run his mouth more than he should.
    Obama sicced the irs on his critics. Now THAT is thin-skinned.

  29. Now, if Trump would follow that up by naming Milo Yiannopoulos as his press secretary . . .

  30. Who knows what really transpired.

    Plausible but Deniable Scenario ?
    The MSM honchos goaded him
    until he “popped off”

    And then leaked how Un-Presidential
    he was.

  31. 8. None of the above

    He has found it to be politically expedient to beat up on the press – indeed, how could he not know that? Plus, belittling one’s opponents undermines their confidence. That puts him in a narrative-controlling position, which is a key advantage to “the art of the deal.” He is “dealing” with the press, and apparently winning.

  32. 5 and 6.

    But I’m still trying to figure out what I think about his Twitter posts – especially wrt/SNL.

  33. Watch.

    The usual business of press pool coverage, while not ended, is not going to be how this admin works.

    trump is aiming for alternative means to get his message out, and leaving the MSM in the dark / cold for much of it, except for the ones who will play by his terms.

    Alternative media, and social media will play a MUCH bigger role.

    He was effectively putting them on “notice”, in his usual trumpian way.

  34. I think it was a planned shot across the bow: he was putting them on notice that he was very aware of their collusion with the DNC and that he was not giving them the benefit of the doubt/trusting them going forward. Trump was referencing wikileaks emails in the last few weeks of the campaign, so he is fully aware of their comfy relationship with the DNC & their shared goal of destroying him.

    Think one also needs to consider that in Trump’s line of business, specifically management at a construction site (i.e. non-office environments), this type of behavior may be more common. I have a friend who supervised assembly lines for a defense tech contractor, and in that environment it was common for a superior to take a subordinate (within management and/or with union personnel) into an office and scream at them. I may be assuming this is common, and not specific to that particular (large) company; however, we’re also assuming Trump will behave like a politician when nothing he’s done so far indicates he has or ever will do that.

  35. 4,5,6,7 — but on #4, not to really “intimidate” them, merely to get them talking about whether their coverage is fair and thus to get better press in the future.

  36. The MSewerM lies about Bush II and other Republican Presidents. In fact, Trum believes a lot of their lies. So what’s people complaining about as if it was new.

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