Trump, election
Digest more
President Trump drew selectively from documents his aides published online to insinuate that U.S. elections have been compromised for years and that government officials had suppressed the evidence.
Despie declassifying documents and providing no evidence prior U.S. election returns had been jeopardized, reactions to Trump's speech were naturally divisive.
President Donald Trump tried to convince Americans in a primetime address that their elections are vulnerable to fraud. CNN annotated the speech with context and analysis.
President Donald Trump used a nationally televised speech to announce the release of declassified election-related documents alleging Chinese interference.
The President’s presentation may have been a rhetorical win for his base, but it was a fact-checker’s minefield—and may end up backfiring bigly.
Al Jazeera on MSN
Key takeaways from Donald Trump’s speech on election security
The president claimed China and ‘deep state’ actors had deceived US voters, but critics say his claims were misleading.
The New Republic on MSNOpinion
Trump’s Favorite News Show Totally Ignores His Election Fraud Speech
President Trump’s rant to the nation about election fraud Thursday night was full of inaccuracies, previously known information, and claims unsupported by evidence. On the biggest conservative TV network,
President Donald Trump’s underwhelming Thursday night address was immediately undercut by experts who fact-checked his claims. Ben Ginsberg, a Republican election lawyer, told CNN’s Kaitlan Collins immediately following the speech that,
Mediaite on MSN
Fox & Friends Completely Ignores Trump’s Election Speech — Doesn’t Mention It Once in 3-Hour Show
As other networks picked apart President Trump’s prime-time address to the nation on Thursday night, Fox News went in a different direction. The post Fox & Friends Completely Ignores Trump’s Election Speech — Doesn’t Mention It Once in 3-Hour Show first appeared on Mediaite.
By Helen Coster NEW YORK, July 16 (Reuters) - Two of the three major U.S. television networks and CNN have decided not to broadcast a planned prime-time address on Thursday by President Donald Trump on their primary platforms,
