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| Meta Title | President Trump Changed Meaning of âFake Newsâ | GW Today | The George Washington University |
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| Boilerpipe Text | GSPM Interim Director Lara Brown (left) and Stephanie Schriock, president of EMILYâs List and M.A. â97, discuss the term "fake news" as part of the Paul OâDwyer Lecture Series. (Logan Werlinger/ GW Today)
By Kristen Mitchell
In the era of President Donald Trump, the label âfake newsâ has taken on new meaning. Journalists had used the words to describe news reports based on falsehoods or originated from an outlet that ignores traditional journalistic standards.
Mr. Trump has turned âfake newsâ into a phrase that undercuts news reports his administration simply does not like.
Major Garrett, chief White House correspondent for CBS News, said politicians are always trying to figure out how much they can get away with. The 2016 presidential campaign suggested they have a lot of leeway with facts.
âThe president has most frequently invoked fake news or ruse to talk about the Russia story,â he said. âMost frequently if the president or those closest to him want to brand that story as completely irrelevant and unworthy of any further scrutiny, itâs to brand it fake news.â
Mr. Garrett offered his comments Wednesday as journalists and political stakeholders gathered at the George Washington Universityâs Jack Morton Auditorium for a
Graduate School of Political Management
panel discussion, âFake News: Spotting Facts and Stopping Fiction.â Lara Brown, GSPMâs interim director, moderated the event, which was part of the Paul OâDwyer Lecture Series.
George Washington President Steven Knapp, whose remarks opened the event, said he was looking forward to hearing about the âtimely topicâ from the distinguished panelists. He introduced
Brian OâDwyer
, B.A. â66, LL.M. â76 and member of the GSPM board of advisers, who founded the lecture series named after his father.
Fake news has always been around, said Mindy Finn, M.P.S. â10 and 2016 vice presidential candidate on a ticket with Utahâs Evan McMullin, but the speed and scale of information sharing has changed.
People see articles shared by friends and family on social media networks like Facebook, and because it is coming from a person they know, they trust the information. Mr. Trump also uses Twitter to share his own versions of the facts, Ms. Finn said.
Stephanie Schriock, president of EMILYâs List and M.A. â97, said Mr. Trumpâs loose relationship with facts is creating an ethics problem for future politicians. Many Americans grew up trusting the news as a source for information that had been fact checked and closely examined.
âTo have the presidentâŚdeem something as fake news is so incredibly dangerous,â she said.
Media distrust is on the rise
, but Ms. Schriock said at least one positive thing came out of the election: a surge in women interested in running for office.
Sopan Deb, culture reporter for The New York Times, said he rejects the idea the media failed the public during the 2016 election. Some of the best journalism of his lifetime happened during the campaign, he said, and subscriptions to mainstream outlets like The New York Times and The Washington Post have continued to climb.
âYou do not hate-subscribe to The New York Times,â he said. âYou do it because youâre interested in what they have to say.â
The institution of journalism does not change because Mr. Trump became president, Mr. Deb said. The media does not need Mr. Trumpâs affection and journalists will continue to do their jobs. He also said fake news alone is not why Mr. Trump was elected.
How the 2016 election will affect future races is yet to be seen, the panelists agreed. Mr. Trumpâs victory could encourage more people without a political background to run for office. It could also set precedent for decreased press access and a different kind of campaigningâ forgoing small events for large rallies, a successful tactic for Mr. Trump.
âI donât think itâs a one-off, in that I do believe it opened peopleâs eyes to the types of candidates that can get elected,â Ms. Finn said. âI do think we will see more candidates in that mold.â |
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- President Trump Changed Meaning of âFake Newsâ

# President Trump Changed Meaning of âFake Newsâ
*Panelists at GW discussed fake news and how media consumption affected the 2016 presidential election.*
***
April 30, 2017
***

*GSPM Interim Director Lara Brown (left) and Stephanie Schriock, president of EMILYâs List and M.A. â97, discuss the term "fake news" as part of the Paul OâDwyer Lecture Series. (Logan Werlinger/ GW Today)*
By Kristen Mitchell
In the era of President Donald Trump, the label âfake newsâ has taken on new meaning. Journalists had used the words to describe news reports based on falsehoods or originated from an outlet that ignores traditional journalistic standards.
Mr. Trump has turned âfake newsâ into a phrase that undercuts news reports his administration simply does not like.
Major Garrett, chief White House correspondent for CBS News, said politicians are always trying to figure out how much they can get away with. The 2016 presidential campaign suggested they have a lot of leeway with facts.
âThe president has most frequently invoked fake news or ruse to talk about the Russia story,â he said. âMost frequently if the president or those closest to him want to brand that story as completely irrelevant and unworthy of any further scrutiny, itâs to brand it fake news.â
Mr. Garrett offered his comments Wednesday as journalists and political stakeholders gathered at the George Washington Universityâs Jack Morton Auditorium for a [Graduate School of Political Management](https://gspm.gwu.edu/) panel discussion, âFake News: Spotting Facts and Stopping Fiction.â Lara Brown, GSPMâs interim director, moderated the event, which was part of the Paul OâDwyer Lecture Series.
George Washington President Steven Knapp, whose remarks opened the event, said he was looking forward to hearing about the âtimely topicâ from the distinguished panelists. He introduced [Brian OâDwyer](https://gspm.gwu.edu/brian-j-odwyer), B.A. â66, LL.M. â76 and member of the GSPM board of advisers, who founded the lecture series named after his father.
Fake news has always been around, said Mindy Finn, M.P.S. â10 and 2016 vice presidential candidate on a ticket with Utahâs Evan McMullin, but the speed and scale of information sharing has changed.
People see articles shared by friends and family on social media networks like Facebook, and because it is coming from a person they know, they trust the information. Mr. Trump also uses Twitter to share his own versions of the facts, Ms. Finn said.
Stephanie Schriock, president of EMILYâs List and M.A. â97, said Mr. Trumpâs loose relationship with facts is creating an ethics problem for future politicians. Many Americans grew up trusting the news as a source for information that had been fact checked and closely examined.
âTo have the presidentâŚdeem something as fake news is so incredibly dangerous,â she said.
[Media distrust is on the rise](http://www.gallup.com/poll/195542/americans-trust-mass-media-sinks-new-low.aspx), but Ms. Schriock said at least one positive thing came out of the election: a surge in women interested in running for office.
Sopan Deb, culture reporter for The New York Times, said he rejects the idea the media failed the public during the 2016 election. Some of the best journalism of his lifetime happened during the campaign, he said, and subscriptions to mainstream outlets like The New York Times and The Washington Post have continued to climb.
âYou do not hate-subscribe to The New York Times,â he said. âYou do it because youâre interested in what they have to say.â
The institution of journalism does not change because Mr. Trump became president, Mr. Deb said. The media does not need Mr. Trumpâs affection and journalists will continue to do their jobs. He also said fake news alone is not why Mr. Trump was elected.
How the 2016 election will affect future races is yet to be seen, the panelists agreed. Mr. Trumpâs victory could encourage more people without a political background to run for office. It could also set precedent for decreased press access and a different kind of campaigningâ forgoing small events for large rallies, a successful tactic for Mr. Trump.
âI donât think itâs a one-off, in that I do believe it opened peopleâs eyes to the types of candidates that can get elected,â Ms. Finn said. âI do think we will see more candidates in that mold.â
***
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[ SMPA Professors Weigh in on Trump and the Media](https://gwtoday.gwu.edu/smpa-professors-weigh-trump-and-media)
[ âTrump Is the Head Writer of Saturday Night Liveâ](https://gwtoday.gwu.edu/trump-head-writer-saturday-night-live)
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| Readable Markdown | *GSPM Interim Director Lara Brown (left) and Stephanie Schriock, president of EMILYâs List and M.A. â97, discuss the term "fake news" as part of the Paul OâDwyer Lecture Series. (Logan Werlinger/ GW Today)*
By Kristen Mitchell
In the era of President Donald Trump, the label âfake newsâ has taken on new meaning. Journalists had used the words to describe news reports based on falsehoods or originated from an outlet that ignores traditional journalistic standards.
Mr. Trump has turned âfake newsâ into a phrase that undercuts news reports his administration simply does not like.
Major Garrett, chief White House correspondent for CBS News, said politicians are always trying to figure out how much they can get away with. The 2016 presidential campaign suggested they have a lot of leeway with facts.
âThe president has most frequently invoked fake news or ruse to talk about the Russia story,â he said. âMost frequently if the president or those closest to him want to brand that story as completely irrelevant and unworthy of any further scrutiny, itâs to brand it fake news.â
Mr. Garrett offered his comments Wednesday as journalists and political stakeholders gathered at the George Washington Universityâs Jack Morton Auditorium for a [Graduate School of Political Management](https://gspm.gwu.edu/) panel discussion, âFake News: Spotting Facts and Stopping Fiction.â Lara Brown, GSPMâs interim director, moderated the event, which was part of the Paul OâDwyer Lecture Series.
George Washington President Steven Knapp, whose remarks opened the event, said he was looking forward to hearing about the âtimely topicâ from the distinguished panelists. He introduced [Brian OâDwyer](https://gspm.gwu.edu/brian-j-odwyer), B.A. â66, LL.M. â76 and member of the GSPM board of advisers, who founded the lecture series named after his father.
Fake news has always been around, said Mindy Finn, M.P.S. â10 and 2016 vice presidential candidate on a ticket with Utahâs Evan McMullin, but the speed and scale of information sharing has changed.
People see articles shared by friends and family on social media networks like Facebook, and because it is coming from a person they know, they trust the information. Mr. Trump also uses Twitter to share his own versions of the facts, Ms. Finn said.
Stephanie Schriock, president of EMILYâs List and M.A. â97, said Mr. Trumpâs loose relationship with facts is creating an ethics problem for future politicians. Many Americans grew up trusting the news as a source for information that had been fact checked and closely examined.
âTo have the presidentâŚdeem something as fake news is so incredibly dangerous,â she said.
[Media distrust is on the rise](http://www.gallup.com/poll/195542/americans-trust-mass-media-sinks-new-low.aspx), but Ms. Schriock said at least one positive thing came out of the election: a surge in women interested in running for office.
Sopan Deb, culture reporter for The New York Times, said he rejects the idea the media failed the public during the 2016 election. Some of the best journalism of his lifetime happened during the campaign, he said, and subscriptions to mainstream outlets like The New York Times and The Washington Post have continued to climb.
âYou do not hate-subscribe to The New York Times,â he said. âYou do it because youâre interested in what they have to say.â
The institution of journalism does not change because Mr. Trump became president, Mr. Deb said. The media does not need Mr. Trumpâs affection and journalists will continue to do their jobs. He also said fake news alone is not why Mr. Trump was elected.
How the 2016 election will affect future races is yet to be seen, the panelists agreed. Mr. Trumpâs victory could encourage more people without a political background to run for office. It could also set precedent for decreased press access and a different kind of campaigningâ forgoing small events for large rallies, a successful tactic for Mr. Trump.
âI donât think itâs a one-off, in that I do believe it opened peopleâs eyes to the types of candidates that can get elected,â Ms. Finn said. âI do think we will see more candidates in that mold.â |
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