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Trump and the press: war over truth is on

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White House Press secretary Sean Spicer is seen on television broadcast monitors as he speaks to the media during the daily briefing in the Brady Press Briefing Room of the White House in Washington, Tuesday, Jan. 24, 2017. AP Photo

WASHINGTON鈥擶ith Donald Trump and the news media unable to agree even on the weather, the war over truth is on.

In the first few days of his presidency, Trump and his aides have been accused of spreading outright lies. The response: the 鈥渄ishonest鈥 media is out to get him.

Since the weekend, Trump has been embroiled in controversy over the crowd at his swearing-in, with both he and the White House overstating its size 鈥 and dismissing conflicting evidence as biased against him.

READ: Trump draws far smaller inaugural crowd than Obama

New York Times fact-checkers called out Trump for claiming the rain stopped and the weather turned 鈥渟unny鈥 after his inaugural speech 鈥 noting that in reality a light rain fell throughout his remarks.

The same day, Trump falsely asserted that his well-documented feud with the US intelligence services was made up by the media.

And two days later, on Monday, he told congressional leaders that as many as five million people could have voted illegally in November 鈥 a claim backed by no public evidence.

During his campaign, Trump鈥檚 loose interpretation of truth kept fact-checkers working around the clock 鈥 PolitiFact found 70 percent of his statements 鈥渕ostly鈥 false or worse.

His first steps in the White House have followed a similar pattern: as news organizations called out the several falsehoods uttered over the weekend, his aide Kellyanne Conway defended what she called 鈥渁lternative facts鈥 鈥 leaving much of America speechless.

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Trump spokesman Sean Spicer, in his first official media briefing on Monday, claimed that much of the press is opposed to the new president and itself fudges facts.

He cited one report 鈥 which turned out to be inaccurate and was later corrected 鈥 indicating a bust of Martin Luther King Jr. had been removed from its place in the White House.

鈥淥ver and over again there鈥檚 this constant attempt to undermine his credibility and the movement that he represents,鈥 Spicer said.

鈥淎nd it鈥檚 frustrating for not just him, but I think so many of us that are trying to work to get this message out. 鈥

Spicer appeared to soften the tone, calling for an improved relationship with journalists after Trump, on his first day in office, dubbed them 鈥渁mong the most dishonest human beings on Earth.鈥

鈥楩ull Orwell鈥

But at next day鈥檚 briefing, Spicer stood by Trump鈥檚 unsubstantiated claims of voter fraud, called out as a 鈥渓ie鈥 by leading media including the New York Times.

Spicer told reporters the president 鈥渉as believed that for a while based on studies and information he has,鈥 without giving evidence.

Trump has previously cited two studies documenting voter registration errors, neither of which makes any claims about fraudulent voting.

Summing up the view of many stunned observers, Washington Post media columnist Margaret Sullivan wrote this week that Spicer was sent to 鈥渂razenly lie鈥 from the White House podium.

鈥淲e鈥檝e gone full Orwell,鈥 she wrote, drawing a parallel to the distortion of facts in the dystopian classic 鈥1984鈥 鈥 sales of which have spiked since the weekend.

In these tussles over facts, some commentators see a deliberate strategy of delegitimizing the press, in order to curtail future scrutiny of the new administration.

鈥淗is war isn鈥檛 with the media. Trump lives off media attention and delights in press coverage. His war is with facts,鈥 argued Vox.com editor-in-chief Ezra Klein.

鈥淭he Trump administration is creating a baseline expectation among its loyalists that they can鈥檛 trust anything said by the media. The spat over crowd size is a low-stakes, semi-comic dispute, but the groundwork is being laid for much more consequential debates over what is, and isn鈥檛, true.鈥

Credibility at stake

Stony Brook University political scientist John Ryan said the new administration appears to understand that increasingly, 鈥渋n politics, the facts do not matter.鈥

Ryan, in a CNBC column, said many people believed unemployment went up under president Barack Obama when the opposite was true.

鈥淭he Trump administration knows this and believes it allows them to say whatever they want,鈥 Ryan said. 鈥淏ecause the facts will not play much of a role in how the public view his administration.鈥

Some analysts warn, however, that Trump鈥檚 apparent willingness to bend facts is eroding his credibility, and could durably undermine trust in the US government.

鈥淲hile I am much more concerned about policy than I am about crowd-size controversies, White House credibility is of paramount importance,鈥 said Andy Wright, a law professor and former White House staffer under Bill Clinton, writing for the Just Security blog.

鈥淭he Trump presidency has already ignited a crisis of confidence,鈥 he said.

鈥淲ithout a credible White House, our allies cannot rely on our promises and our adversaries doubt our threats. Everything gets more dangerous.鈥

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