USA Today on Wednesday published an opinion piece credited to President Donald Trump, less than a month before this year’s contentious midterm elections.
Trump used the opportunity
to lambast Democrats, unsurprisingly. Specifically, he went after the
party’s proposal to establish a national single-payer health care
system. He accused the left of wanting to spread radical socialism by
gutting Medicare, even though it is widely considered to be a socialist
program. It’s a bizarre argument he has employed before.
Trump
also said he had defended protections for people with pre-existing
conditions, which isn’t true. No matter what Trump says, his Justice
Department has said it will no longer support provisions in the Affordable Care Act that protect people with pre-existing conditions.
Editors for the paper appeared to use hyperlinks to direct readers to facts contradicting some of Trump’s claims.
Where
the president said he is “fighting so hard against the Democrats’ plan
that would eviscerate Medicare,” readers can click through to a September 2017 New York Times report
that explains how the opposite is true. Another hyperlink directs
readers to a November 2016 Forbes column by a contributor who said Trump
would likely be the one to gut Medicare.
Yet allowing the full piece to stand without an editor’s note struck many as blatantly irresponsible.
Journalists and readers were quick to criticize USA Today ― a widely trusted national publication that says it has 3 million daily readers
and 7.8 million Facebook followers ― for publishing the 800-word piece.
The Toronto Star’s Washington correspondent called the piece “a White
House press release disguised as an ‘op-ed by Donald Trump.’”
USA Today not only published a White House press release disguised as an “op-ed by Donald Trump,” it is using its Twitter account to blast out the article’s lies to 3.6 million followers. https://t.co/5qpjfDOWHh
— Daniel Dale (@ddale8) October 10, 2018
CNN’s
Jim Acosta speculated that the piece may “break the record for the
number of falsehoods from a president ever published in an op-ed.”
This column may break the record for the number of falsehoods from a President ever published in a newspaper op-Ed. Just this tweet alone is false - “outlaw private health care plans” and “letting anyone cross our border” Huh? Fact check: false and false. Come on USA Today. https://t.co/1SPKMztmJL
— Jim Acosta (@Acosta) October 10, 2018
Trump: "If we elect Democrats the moon will cease orbiting the earth"
USA Today: "Print it."
— Oliver Willis (@owillis) October 10, 2018
Neither USA Today nor its parent company, Gannett, responded to HuffPost’s requests for comment.
Sen.
Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.), who helped popularize the idea of Medicare for
all during his 2016 presidential run, slammed the column in a statement.
“President
Trump’s USA Today Op-Ed is just the latest in a long and blatant
disinformation campaign designed to mislead the public while his
administration engages in a purposeful sabotage of our nation’s
healthcare system,” Sanders said.
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