FLASHBACK: When right-wing pundits thought political hush money payments were a crime
Last week, Elon Musk announced that Twitter's main algorithmic feed will soon only display tweets from people who pay the company a monthly fee. This means effectively that, unless you pay Musk's ransom, almost no one will see your tweets. This is a big problem for Popular Information. Since our founding in 2018, half of our subscribers have found out about this newsletter through Twitter. Twitter is now hostile territory for Popular Information. Musk has personally attacked our work. After I documented how the Community Notes feature is being weaponized against Popular Information's accurate reporting Musk tweeted to his 130 million followers that I am a "tool." Popular Information can adapt to this new reality and continue to thrive, but we need your help. We have 237,000 readers, but only a small percentage are paid subscribers. If a few more readers upgrade to paid, Popular Information can invest in alternative growth strategies and produce more accountability journalism that rattles the cages of the rich and powerful. "The facts are that he broke campaign finance laws and that he lied to cover it up," Fox News' Sean Hannity said. Hannity was not talking about former President Donald Trump, who was indicted last week for funneling $130,000 to his alleged mistress, Stormy Daniels. Prosecutors in Manhattan are expected to allege that Trump violated campaign finance laws by not reporting the payment as a campaign contribution and then falsified business records as part of a coverup. The precise charges will remain under seal until Trump is formally arraigned on Tuesday. The quote from Hannity, from June 3, 2011, refers to former presidential candidate and former senator John Edwards (D-NC), who was indicted that day on charges similar to those Trump now faces. Edwards was charged with violating campaign finance law by "accept[ing] more than $900,000 in an effort to conceal from the public facts that he believed would harm his candidacy" and then hiding the contributions from the FEC. The money funded payoffs to Rielle Hunter, his mistress, to cover up his affair during his presidential campaign in 2007 and 2008. According to the indictment, Edwards conspired with his staff to falsify the purpose of the payments, claiming the funds were used for "chairs" and an "antique table." From the outset of the Edwards investigation to the indictment and throughout the trial, Hannity expressed no objection to Edwards being prosecuted for this conduct. On the contrary, Hannity regularly endorsed the prosecutors' theory that money spent to cover up an affair during a campaign should be considered an illegal campaign contribution. In February 2011, Hannity conducted a sympathetic interview with former Edwards aide Andrew Young, who was the prosecution's star witness in the case. Young had initially claimed paternity of Hunter's child, even though Edwards was the actual father. In March 2011, Hannity said that an indictment could "come any day now" and promoted phone conversations recorded by Young as "very incriminating." The recordings, according to Hannity, proved "he knew this money was being raised in spite of claims to the contrary; if in fact that's true, that's in violation of law." Hannity also regularly featured guests arguing that Edwards had committed a serious crime. Hannity's June 3, 2011 program featured former prosecutor Kelly Saindon, who had this to say about Edwards' conduct:
On May 31, 2012, the jury in the Edwards case deadlocked on most charges, and the judge declared a mistrial. In response, Hannity continued to argue that Edwards was guilty because he was using money in excess of the campaign limits to cover up an affair during the campaign. "[I]f we look at this very closely, a campaign contribution, anything of value… for the purpose of influencing the outcome of an election," Hannity said, "So weren't they trying to basically… circumvent the law?" But when news broke that Trump was indicted for paying $130,000 in hush money in the closing days of a campaign and then falsifying business records to cover his tracks, Hannity had a much different response. Here is an excerpt from Hannity's opening monologue last Thursday, after news of the Trump indictment first broke:
Hannity isn't the only right-wing media personality to have diametrically opposed reactions to Edwards' and Trump's indictments. Now v. Then: Fox News and the Wall Street JournalNumerous right-wing pundits who blasted Trump's indictment were happy to see Edwards criminally charged for similar conduct. Former Fox News host Megyn Kelly tweeted that Manhattan DA Alvin Bragg, who is leading the prosecution of Trump, should be "ashamed of himself." Alvin Bragg should be ashamed of himself. This is a travesty for our country, but it is a political windfall for Donald Trump. If he wins in “24 he will have Alvin Bragg to thank. But in numerous appearances on the O'Reilly Factor during the Edwards' investigation and trial, Kelly did not suggest any impropriety by prosecutors. In an April 26, 2012 appearance, while the trial was ongoing, Kelly said the case was "going pretty well for the prosecution" because "it doesn't seem like a lot of the facts are in dispute." O'Reilly, in reaction to the Trump indictment, called it "bad for the country" and a "political play." He also expressed confidence that Trump's lawyer "should be able to shred the case." But at the conclusion of the Edwards trial, during the deliberations, O'Reilly declared the evidence against Edwards was "pretty damning." Throughout the prosecution, O'Reilly repeatedly declared that Edwards was "guilty." On Twitter, former Fox News contributor Kimberly Guilfoyle described the charges against Trump as a "sham indictment" because there was "no crime committed." But Guilfoyle was an enthusiastic supporter of the prosecution of Edwards. "I think there is a strong case against him," she said in October 2011. "You have people who also going to testify against him. So, I think he is in trouble." Today, the Wall Street Journal editorial page is full of columns trashing the decision to charge Trump. A typical editorial last month decried Bragg's "bad judgment" and accused him of indicting Trump "based on the weakest of charges." The paper does not appear to have run any column defending Bragg's indictment. The paper, owned by Rupert Murdoch, took a different approach with the charges against John Edwards. It ran multiple columns emphasizing the righteousness of the charges against Edwards. Steve Simpson, for example, wrote the following in June 2011:
Similar arguments appear in multiplecolumns by James Taranto, who currently edits the paper's op-ed page. |
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