In a Dec. 16 post, the Media Research Center’s Tim Graham huffed that “Donald Trump correctly felt NBC reporter Katy Tur was hostile to him on the campaign trail.” Graham doesn’t mention how the MRC played a big role in ginning up the idea of that purported hostility.
At a Nov. 2 rally, Donald Trump singled out Tur, complaining about the purportedly “dishonest” media before shouting at Tur: “There’s something happening. They’re not reporting it. Katy — you’re not reporting it, Katy. But there’s something happening, Katy. There’s something happening, Katy.” Tur responded afterwards by pointing out that while attacking reporters is part of Trump’s “schtick” on the campaign trail, and his complaints about how the media covers the rallies is false, “it does make the crowd very angry and it does concern a lot of folks about the safety of journalists.”
This wasn’t the first time: Tur wrote that after Trump targeted her in a December 2015 rally, the Secret Service had to walk her to her car for her protection.
Did Trump get advice for choosing Tur as a target from the MRC? Let’s look at the evidence.
In an Oct. 24 Media Research Center item, Nicholas Fondacaro complained that “The ‘Big Three’ networks (ABC, CBS, NBC) put their undying loyalty to Democratic nominee Hillary Clinton on full display Monday evening, as they completely blacked out two news stories with explosive consequences for the campaign,” in contrast to the reporting of pro-Trump Fox News. He sneered: “NBC Nightly News led with Clinton fangirl Andrea Mitchell talking about how comfortable Clinton is with her lead, then pivoting to Katy Tur who mocked the GOP candidate.” Curiously, Fondacaro provided no evidence whatsoever of the “mocking” he claimed Tur did.
That seemed to be a catalyst for Trump’s Nov. 2 attack on Tur, but the MRC has long bashed her for not being a right-wing shill throughout the 2016 campaign:
- In a September 2015 post, Ken Shepherd huffed that Tur “trashed Values Voters Summit attendees as the ‘far right’ of the GOP” (though Shepherd doesn’t prove otherwise), but he cheered when she “was interrupted by an attendee who told her to quiet down.”
- In December 2015, Curtis Houck asserted that Tur “hyped that the crowd at the Trump rally on Monday ‘was anything but merry and bright’ as reporters like her were ‘booed and cheered’ by the ‘riled up and angry’ crowd.”
- On March 11, Houck was upset that “Tur took to MSNBC to air a multitude of concerns about the growing number of violent incidents at Trump rallies to go along with Tuesday’s alleged bruising of Breitbart’s Michelle Fields by Trump campaign manager Corey Lewandowski.”
- On March 30, Kristine Marsh complained that Tur “slammed” Mike Huckabee as a “hardline anti-abortion rights conservative,” declaring that “anti-abortion” a “biased” term (even though it’s a more accurate term since all “pro-life” activists are, in fact, opposed to abortion).
- In May, Mark Finkelstein grumbled that Tur suggested that it’s “veiled sexism” to suggest that Hillary Clinton lacked the stamina to be president, arguing that it wasn’t sexist because Trump said the same thing about Jeb Bush.
- Marsh cheered in July when Trump “shushed” Tur for “continuing to press her question after he briefly answered it then shifted the focus to Hillary Clinton,” justifying Trump’s rudeness by delcaring that “Trump is universally brusque to reporters regardless of gender.”
- Sam Dorman complained on Aug. 9 that when Tur reported on Trump’s sketchy tax plan as revealed in a speech, she “framed it as an attempt to appease disgruntled republicans.”
- On Sept. 26 Kyle Drennen was angry that Tur pointed out that Trump was trying to “game this system” by pre-emptively bashing media debate coverage”; according to Drennen’s interpretation, Tur “denounced Donald Trump’s campaign team for demanding fair treatment from the press ahead of the upcoming debate.”
- A Oct. 2 post by Nicholas Fondacaro complained that Tur “seemed outraged that being able to write off net-losses on taxes was legal.”
The MRC — as its agenda dictates — had a definite interest in painting Tur as hostile to Republicans in general and Trump in particular, even though much of the criticism was because Tur accurately reported events in a way that didn’t advance the agenda of Trump and Republicans. It wasn’t necessarily “correct” — it was a politically motivated campaign.
The MRC was determined to paint Tur as “hostile” to Trump simply because she was not a Trump sycophant. And it appears they made Trump know that Tur was not a sycophant, which encouraged him to single her out with anger on the campaign trail.