CNSNews.com reporter Susan Jones has finally decided that She Who Must Not Be Named has a name after all.
After writing a story about the burgeoning Stormy Daniels scandal involving President Trump that somehow avoided using Daniels’ name (while also dismissing the entire story as a “liberal media” narrative), Jones has finally decided that Daniels has a name after all — while also continuing to try and pigeonhole the story as nothing but a liberal media narrative.
In a March 13 article, Jones dismisses MSNBC’s Joe Scarborough as a “Trump hater” for bringing up the story:
To Trump haters, anything the president does lately is done with one goal in mind: to knock the Stormy Daniels story out of the headlines.
MSNBC’s Joe Scarborough on Tuesday morning questioned why Republicans on the House intelligence committee abruptly announced on Monday that their investigation into Russian interference has all but ended, with no evidence of collusion found on the part of either the Trump campaign or the Hillary Clinton campaign.
Jones then added her pithy summary of the scandal:
Stormy Daniels is a porn star who says she was paid $130,000 by one of Trump’s attorneys to keep quiet about an affair she claims to have had with him in 2006. Trump was married to Melania at the time.
Trump has denied the affair, and Daniels did too, for a while – but then Daniels changed her mind and now insists it really did happen.
She launched a strip club tour in January on the anniversary of Donald Trump’s inauguration.
Daniels is now suing to void a nondisclosure agreement she reportedly signed before the 2016 election. Her lawyer has told various cable outlets she’s not doing this for the money…
You know who else denied a sexual incident with a politician and then “changed her mind and now insists it really did happen”? Juanita Broaddrick. But you’ll never see Jones report it that way.
In a March 16 item — presented as a blog post even though its partisan tone is no different from the above “news” article — Jones huffed: “Making the rounds of liberal cable channels Friday morning, Stormy Daniels’ attorney Michael Avenatti said he was not there to hype an upcoming “60 Minutes” interview with the porn star — even as he hyped the upcoming interview.” She huffed even further that “Rarely has a porn star been accorded such credibility.”
Jones ended the article by complaining:
Trump’s womanizing hardly comes as a shock to the American people, so the question for people on both sides of the Trump divide is whether and how any of this matters to anyone, anyway — except as a means of further undermining Trump’s presidency.
Starting 14 months ago, the politics of personal destruction has become a daily spectator sport in Washington, with liberal media outlets leading the charge.
Jones has a conveniently short memory if she thinks the “politics of personal destruction” began only 14 months ago. Bill Clinton’s womanizing didn’t come as a shock to Americans either, despite CNS parent the Media Research Center’s pearl-clutching over it in the 1990s. Using Jones’ argument, this means that the MRC was never motivated by any sense of morality but as a means of trying to undermine his presidency — which would seem to be a violation of its nonprofit tax status.
In a March 26 article, written after Daniels’ interview on “60 Minutes,” Jones makes sure to identify Daniels as an “aging porn star,” then huffed that she “assured America she’s not in it for the money — then talked about all the “job offers” she’s getting by going public with her claims about Donald Trump.” And in a companion article, Jones complained that Daniels’ attorney, Michael Avanetti, was trying to “discredit Donald Trump” by trying to get a deposition from Trump regarding Daniels — as if Trump hasn’t already discredited himself long before now.
We already know Jones is a slavish pro-Trump loyalist, but she’s just embarrassing herself her with her aggressive defense of Trump over something she’d be in attack mode over if Trump were not a Republican.