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Stelter Decries Trump Acting as ‘Word Police,’ But He Backed Disinformation Board
In an appearance on Wednesday’s CNN Newsroom and in his so-called “Reliable Sources” Newsletter, liberal media janitor Brian Stelter kvetched about President Trump “embracing the role of word police” for barring the Associated Press from official White House events over their refusal to call it the Gulf of America. Meanwhile, Stelter had backed the Biden administration’s attempt to create a literal word police via the Department Homeland Security and the so-called Disinformation Governance Board.
“In a statement, an AP spokesperson says, quote, ‘This is about the government telling the public and press that what words to use and retaliating if they do not follow government orders,’” host Pamela Brown teed up Stelter.
To which Stelter whined: “Yeah, Trump is embracing the role of word police. You know, he is trying to enforce the idea that the Gulf of America is the only acceptable name.”
Stelter went on to argue that, “The AP has clients and customers around the world, many of whom recognize it as the Gulf of Mexico.” And touted how the AP was “not going to back down here. And as a result, this is a stalemate that's now going into a second week.”
He went on to bellyache about the lack of overt support the AP was getting from other outlets and shared the AP’s frustration with it:
The AP, I'm told by editors and others, is kind of frustrating, feeling kind of alone on this matter because the Trump administration has targeted the AP and not other news outlets. But there is a behind the scenes effort to try to get the AP off the banned list and back into the Oval Office, back into Air Force One, for example. The White House Correspondents Association has been working behind the scenes, galvanizing support from dozens of other news outlets basically to express a solidarity with the AP, and it's all happening in secret, behind the scenes. There's been no public display of that kind of solidarity.
“There is a big push happening. The White House Correspondents' Association, which represents the press corps, has been trying to work out a solution…WHCA president Eugene Daniels has privately described it as a very delicate matter – so delicate, in fact, that leaks have been strongly discouraged,” Stelter wrote in his newsletter.
But despite his apparent outrage at Trump acting as the “word police,” Stelter has shown that he supports the idea quite literally. In July of 2022, before his ouster from the network, Stelter lamented the demise of former-President Biden’s attempt at creating word police under the Department of Homeland Security via the Disinformation Governance Board.
In an interview with the would-be board’s lead censor, Nina Jankowicz, the two commiserated and lamented how the public decried the creation of a Ministry of Truth from George Orwell’s 1984:
STELTER: So the sympathetic view, to you, is that the disinformation board was the victim of disinformation. Is that how you feel?
JANKOWICZ: Oh, it absolutely was the victim of disinformation. All of these narratives, that the disinformation governance board was going to be this Orwellian ministry of truth and all of the harassment and disinformation that was directed against me, was based on that falsehood. Based on that falsehood that was knowingly peddled by many people in the conservative media ecosystem and on Capitol Hill.
The evidence quite obviously points to the fact that Stelter and CNN were for the existence of “word police,” they just wanted to wield the Billy club. They wanted to be the ones to tell you not talk about Hunter Biden’s laptop, President Biden’s failing mental facilities, and not to speak of a weaponized DOJ.
CNN couldn’t be trusted to police words either. As became apparent during their defamation trial, no one at CNN knows the correct definition of “black market” and they don’t have a preferred dictionary.
The transcript is below. Click "expand" to read:
CNN Newsroom
February 19, 2025
10:45:55 a.m. Eastern
(…)
PAMELA BROWN: In a statement, an AP spokesperson says, quote, "This is about the government telling the public and press that what words to use and retaliating if they do not follow government orders."
So, you have some new reporting, Brian, on how this is resonating.
BRIAN STELTER: Yeah, Trump is embracing the role of word police. You know, he is trying to enforce the idea that the Gulf of America is the only acceptable name. The AP views it differently. The AP has clients and customers around the world, many of whom recognize it as the Gulf of Mexico. So, the AP is not going to back down here. And as a result, this is a stalemate that's now going into a second week.
The AP, I'm told by editors and others, is kind of frustrating, feeling kind of alone on this matter because the Trump administration has targeted the AP and not other news outlets. But there is a behind the scenes effort to try to get the AP off the banned list and back into the Oval Office, back into Air Force One, for example. The White House Correspondents Association has been working behind the scenes, galvanizing support from dozens of other news outlets basically to express a solidarity with the AP, and it's all happening in secret, behind the scenes. There's been no public display of that kind of solidarity.
So, basically the AP is trying to get the Trump White House to come to the table, have some sort of conversation, try to get back, things back to normal. But let's be clear, right, the Trump White House wants this fight. Trump wants this. You could hear it in his voice yesterday. He is embracing this battle.
And it's not just going to end with what the name of the Gulf of Mexico is, it's not going to end at the Gulf. This is a broader battle by Trump to define the terms of the relationship with the press. And I suspect, Pamela, we're going to be talking about this for some time to come because it's not going to end with the Gulf of Mexico.
BROWN: No. Well, and his base loves it, right? Brian Stelter, thank you.