A Dec. 19 Newsmax article summarizes its boss’ appearance on CNN:
The news media was biased in its coverage of Donald Trump and that partiality had a bigger impact on the election than any “fake news,” Newsmax CEO Christopher Ruddy told Brian Stelter Sunday on CNN’s “Reliable Sources.”
“You guys had a responsibility to give fair and balanced news,” Ruddy said in his one-on-one segment with host Stelter.
“Instead the mainstream press focused on Trump’s use of Twitter and the release of an audio recording on ‘Access Hollywood.’ The voters in Ohio and Wisconsin and Pennsylvania, they were worried about jobs and trade.
“Donald Trump, to his credit, was in those states talking about those issues. You guys missed the story.”
Ruddy said the media continues to be critical of Trump, focusing on stories like fake news and Russian hacking.
“I don’t think they’re necessarily giving him a complete fair shake,” he said.
In that segment, however, Ruddy doesn’t really discuss his own “responsibility to give fair and balanced news,” as if conservative news outlets are exempt from responsible journalism. He said only that Newsmax will grow its online and video operations during the Trump presidency and that Newsmax “is going to be tough on Trump when we think he’s going off the rails on policy issues,” but he made it clear that his news operation will be “supportive” of him overall. IN other words. he’s demanding more balance from his competition than from his own operation.
Ruddy also didn’t explicitly disclose how close he and Trump are, or that Newsmax played a major role in legitimizing the idea of Trump as presidential timber. Indeed, the day after his CNN appearance, he tweeted: “Just finished Newsmax Christmas @ 230 Fifth, Pres. Trump called my cell at party wishing ‘Merry Xmas’ – @realDonaldTrump is not happy w CNN!”
Ruddy then repeated how a study (he incorrectly claimed it was from the Pew Center; it was actually done by the Freedom Forum) from the 1990s reported that “89 percent of the people voted for Bill Clinton — of the press corps in Washington voted for Bill Clinton.” We documented way back in 2000 how skewed that study was; most study respondents weren’t from national news outlets but from small regional papers whose Washington bureau reporters, some of whom are just one person, focus their coverage mostly on local issues and have no influence on the national political agenda.