The Trump-fluffers at Newsmax were putting a pro-Trump slant on the first debate of Republican presidential candidates months before it happened. In June, Newsmax was touting how Trump was thinking about skipping the debate; that was followed by a July 12 column by Trump toady Dick Morris dismissing the debate as a “kangaroo court” and insisting that “Our nation’s 45th president should refuse to participate in any debate moderated by the likes of Baier and Martha MacCallum. He should, instead, propose that Tucker Carlson be the moderator.” Morris added: “Better yet, Mr. Trump should walk next door to Newsmax and ask them to sponsor a one-on-one interview between Tucker and Trump, at the exact same time as the likely rigged debate the RINOs are hosting.” Trump did a little of his usual logrolling in a July 20 Newsmax TV appearance, declaring that “Newsmax should get a debate.”
On Aug. 9, Newsmax wrote how Trump was still teasing whether or not he would take part, as well as another article about him whining about a planned Republican loyalty pledge that presidential candidates endorse the eventual nominee. And even though Trump ultimately chose not to participate, Newsmax still made him the center of its debate coverage: An Aug. 21 article by Mark Swanson complained that “Fox News will not allow surrogates of former President Donald Trump into the spin room of Wednesday’s GOP presidential debate, a highly unusual move that could be construed as retaliatory over Trump’s decision to skip it.” That was followed by Megyn Kelly gushing on Newsmax TV the next day that Trump is a “ratings machine” for whatever he does instead of thte debate, and her former employer, debate host Fox News, deserves the “middle finger” Trump is giving it.
After it was made clear that an interview Trump did with fired Fox News host Tucker Carlson would be his counterprogramming against the debate, Newsmax plugged that too. Brian Freeman was in hype mode in an Aug. 23 article:
Former President Donald Trump declared on his Truth Social site Wednesday that “my interview with Tucker Carlson will be aired tonight at 9 p.m. Sparks will fly. Enjoy.”
This is the exact same time that the first Republican primary debate for the presidential nomination will begin in Milwaukee. The debate will be televised nationally on Fox News, and will include eight other candidates.
Trump announced earlier this week that he would not be participating in the debate, citing his commanding lead in the GOP field — he’s about 40 points ahead in national polls — and instead would be taking part in the interview, The Hill reported.
The pre-recorded interview will be broadcast on X, formerly known as Twitter.
That was followed by an Aug. 23 column by Paul Quenoy proclaiming Trump’s refusal to take part in the debate “a brilliant move by the most astute strategist in American politics since Ronald Reagan,” adding; “All Trump needs do on Wednesday is sit back and look down on the arena as the other candidates tear each other apart while revealing their strengths and weaknesses to a leader who will soon almost certainly be unchallenged. Sun Tzu could not have strategized it better.”
Newsmax didn’t do too much coverage of the debate itself; it was more interested in bashing candidate Vivek Ramaswamy after he exposed the pay-for-play coverage scheme Newsmax wanted to impose on his campaign. It did, however, devote three articles to Trump’s interview with Carlson:
- Trump to Carlson: They’ll Try to Steal Election Again
- Trump on Assassination Threat: ‘They’re Savage Animals’
- Trump: Biden ‘Looks Terrible on the Beach’
Trump was also given space to brag that his interview with Carlson had “over 100 million views in less than four hours” — but it didn’t tell readers that Twitter’s view metric is so unreliable as to be meaningless. An article by Eric Mack insisted that “Fox News’ first Republican primary debate got a terrible response from American television viewers, with the broadcast losing about half the audience Fox’s kickoff debate had during the 2016 election.” In reality, though, the debate drew much higher ratings than expected for an event lacking Trump — and those ratings dwarfed the number who actually watched the entirety of the Carlson-Trump interview. Still, yet another article by Swanson let Trump go on a tirade of “trolling the network over its “anemic debate ratings” while Trump’s interview with Tucker Carlson — which aired the same night — surpassed 250 million views,” without fear of being fact-checked by Newsmax.
Newsmax kept other coverage of the debate Trump-centric even though he wasn’t there. One article noted that the candidates at the debate discussed Trump, while a column by John Gizzi declared that “More than a few political prognosticators who do not have a favorite Republican candidate told Newsmax on Wednesday night that the true winner of the first GOP presidential debate was actually the contender who sat it out.” Both Donald Trump Jr. and his girlfriend, Kimberly Guilfoyle, were given space to whine that they were blocked from the post-debate spin room.
We’ve noted how Perry Johnson — a fringe candidate who, unlike Ramaswamy, is buying lots of airtime on Newsmax — was given lots of space to complain that he wasn’t invited to take part in the debate. Another low-polling fringe candidate who similarly failed to qualify, Larry Elder, also got space to complain as well:
- Larry Elder Files Complaint With FEC Over Debate Absence
- Elder to Newsmax: I Was Also ‘Barred’ From Debate Venue
Newsmax had more opinions to share about the debate (and Trump) as well. More soon.