06/02/2023

As Donald Trump spoke at the White House, repeating baseless claims the US election was being stolen from him, several US networks cut away from the broadcast, while others offered live fact-checks of the President’s statements.

US television networks ABC, CBS and NBC all cut away from President Donald Trump during a White House speech in which he made unfounded accusations that the presidential election was being stolen from him.
Key points:

  • Donald Trump’s speech at the White House was not broadcast in full by a number of major US TV networks
  • USA Today removed the video from its platforms, its editor saying “our job is to spread truth not unfounded conspiracies”
  • CNN broadcast the speech in full, but anchor Jake Tapper described it as “lie after lie after lie”

Mr Trump had tried to commandeer the nation’s airwaves at a time when the evening newscasts are shown on the East Coast, after a day when the slow drip of vote counting revealed his leads in Pennsylvania and Georgia dwindling.
MSNBC’s Brian Williams also interrupted the President. Fox News Channel and CNN aired the president’s full address, after which CNN’s Anderson Cooper said Trump was “like an obese turtle on his back, flailing in the hot sun realising his time was over”.
Network personalities had sharply criticised Mr Trump after his angry, middle-of-the-night speech following Election Day but aired that talk in full.
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Mr Trump was more subdued on Friday (AEDT), yet offered a litany of complaints about “suppression” polls, mail-in voting and fraud that he never specified.
“We have to interrupt here, because the President has made a number of false statements, including the notion that there has been fraudulent voting,” NBC’s Lester Holt said.
“There has been no evidence of that.”
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CBS’s Norah O’Donnell broke in to ask correspondent Nancy Cordes to fact-check Mr Trump’s assertion that if “legal votes” were counted, he would easily win the election.
Ms Cordes said there is no indication of a substantive number of illegal votes cast, and said Mr Trump’s reference to votes arriving late was “another falsehood”.
MSNBC cut away from Mr Trump to anchor Brian Williams.
“Here we are again in the unusual position of not only interrupting the President of the United States, but correcting the President of the United States,” he said.
“There are no illegal votes that we know of, there has been no Trump victory that we know of.”
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After ABC ended its coverage, the network’s White House correspondent, Jonathan Karl, also said there was no evidence of illegal votes.
“What he seems to be frustrated by is that it takes time to count votes,” Mr Karl said.
“It’s always taken time to count votes. But especially in this election.”
Prominent site USA Today also cut its online livestream of Mr Trump’s speech and removed it from its platforms.
A statement from the site’s editor, Nicole Carroll, said: “Our job is to spread truth not unfounded conspiracies.”
While CNN kept Mr Trump on the air, a chyron displayed under him read: “Without any evidence, Trump says he’s being cheated.”
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After the speech ended, anchor Jake Tapper said Mr Trump had told “lie after lie after lie”.
“What a sad night for the United States of America to hear their President say that, to falsely accuse people of trying to steal the election, to try to attack democracy in that way with this feast of falsehoods,” he said.
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CNN analysts David Axelrod and Van Jones both said they were angered by Mr Trump’s attacks on authorities in Detroit and Philadelphia, suggesting they amounted to racism.
On Fox News Channel, commentators Bill Bennett and Byron York said that just because Mr Trump did not allege specific instances of irregularities, it did not mean there had not been any but, they argued, the President and his lawyers needed to present evidence.
“What we saw tonight is a president who believes that at the end of the day, when all the votes are counted, the election is not going to to go his way, so he’s trying to plan an alternate route to retain the White House,” Fox White House correspondent John Roberts said.
The New York Post, a prominent Trump media ally, headlined a story on the speech: “Donald Trump makes baseless election fraud claims in White House address.”
CBS News’s John Dickerson said Mr Trump’s speech “felt like kind of a deflated recitation”.
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ABC/AP