The Media Research Center is so in the tank for President Trump that it felt compelled to spend a post downplaying the fact that Trump cheats at golf.
The MRC writer with that grim duty is Alex Christy, who began his April 2 post grousing that MSNBC’s “Morning Joe” program “missed April Fool’s Day by a day” by having on respected sportswriter Rick Reilly, who found so much about Trump’s cheating at golf that he wrote an entire book about it. Christy then went into full spin/sycophancy mode:
Reilly could not imagine why anyone would cheat or bend the truth to some extent on the links. He called a story of Trump hitting his ball into the water multiple times on the same hole, only to say he was putting for four. For Reilly, this sort of lie explains Trump. He recalled a conversation he had with Arnold Palmer who told him that he always played a round of golf with a would-be business partner, ‘”Because in four hours you can’t hide who you are. So, if he cheats on the course, he’ll cheat in business. If he’s honest and fun, he’ll be honest and fun in business.”‘
Certainly golf is a game of etiquette and players are trusted to be honest and apply the rules themselves, especially for those who play competitively or take their game seriously. For others who just want to have a good time, the use of the foot wedge or turning a six into a four is not a scandal.
However, according to Reilly, Trump is the kind of golfer who takes his game seriously and accused him of lying about his club championships. Co-host Joe Scarborough piled on the Golfer-in-Chief, also accusing him of lying about his scores. Reilly then charged that Trump selectively selected his best rounds to lower his handicap.
Has Trump been completely truthful about his golf game? Probably not. But it is not a national scandal that golfers fudge their handicap or take creative liberties with the USGA rule book.
Christy’s shoulder-shrugging over Trump’s cheating at golf is a continuation of the MRC’s double standard on presidential golf, in which it defends Trump’s golf-playing (honestly or otherwise) while it regularly attacked President Obama for allegedly playing too much golf.For instance, in 2012 the MRC thought it was a “startling observation” that Obama played 105 rounds of golf in his first term, only one of which was with a Republican, though Trump has played nearly as many in just the first two years of his presidency (and had criticized the amount of golf Obama played) and whined that it was reported that Obama had played his 300th round of golf as president (and keeps score and doesn’t cheat and doesn’t take mulligans).
Indeed, the MRC has resorted to whataboutism on the subject. For instance:
- CBS Whines About Trump’s Vacation, Excused Obama’s Golf Fun
- CNN Blasts Trump for Golf Outings, Yawned at Obama’s Vacations
So you can see just how much the MRC has to reverse course just to give a pass to Trump for something it regularly attacked Obama for doing.