A version of this article first appeared in the âReliable Sourcesâ newsletter. You can sign up for free right here.
Okay, Sean Hannity, what are you going to do now?
He started his Tuesday night Fox News show by teasing a message to the âcowardly swamp creaturesâ in DC and the âmedia mob.â Throughout the show, Hannity hyped the segment, telling his audience, âYou donât want to miss it.â The suggestion, of course, was that he was going to issue a response to the January 6 Committeeâs request for his cooperation in the insurrection investigation. But the promotion for the segment ended up being a head fake.
In the final moments of his show, Hannity instead delivered a rant on the lack of Covid testing availability. Which is to say that Hannity wholly ignored the 1/6 committeeâs request and the damning revelations contained in the letter its top members sent to him. But he wonât be able to stay silent about it forever. After the show, his outside counsel Jay Sekulow issued a new statement: âWe are evaluating the letter from the committee. We remain very concerned about the constitutional implications especially as it relates to the First Amendment. We will respond as appropriate.â
Fox Corp. also remained silent about what Hannity and other stars knew in the run-up to the riot and in the days afterward. Lachlan Murdoch and Suzanne Scott can dismiss Hannity as an opinion host all they want, but he should still be subject to some editorial standardsâ¦
What it means
Hannityâs texts to Mark Meadows, disclosed by the J6 Committee, illustrate for the umpteenth time a clear breach of traditional news media ethics by Hannity. And they show, also for the umpteenth time, how Hannity operated during the Trump years behind the scenes as a shadow chief of staff. The new part, perhaps, is how ineffective he was!
As Jamie Gangel pointed out on âDon Lemon Tonight,â every line of the letter was crafted on purpose. So what about Hannityâs December 31, 2020 message to Meadows that said, âI do NOT see January 6 happening the way he is being told.â Did Hannity try to talk Trump away from delusional thinking? If so, he failed. And what about the January 10 text to Meadows and Jim Jordan, saying, âGuys, we have a clear path to land the plane in 9 days. He canât mention the election again. Ever.â Clearly Trump doesnât respect Hannity very much, since Trumpâs past 12 months have been full of election lies.
Deceiving the audience
The texts also prove â once more â that Hannity was dishonest with his audience. He likes to claim that he says the same thing privately as he says publicly. But that clearly isnât the case. Privately, in these text messages, Hannity was expressing profound worries about Trump. But, publicly, those concerns were never conveyed to his audience. Instead, Hannity served as a loyal cheerleader of Trump until the end.
Brian Stelter went off about that on Lemonâs show just now, highlighting Hannityâs January 10 comment to Meadows that âI did not have a good call with him today.â Stelter said: âOn January 10, 11 and 12, what did Sean Hannity tell his viewersâ about that call? âDid he inform them about Donald Trumpâs mental health? About his state of mind? No. He lied and assisted the cover-up.â Stelter also pointed out that House members have many, many more texts from other Fox personalities. What else is going to be revealed?
Trump: Hannity is wrong!
Well, so much for this valuable friendship, eh? As CNNâs Kaitlan Collins reported, Trump put out a statement Tuesday evening objecting to Hannityâs January 10 assertion that he âcanât mention the election again.â Ouch. âI disagree with Sean on that statement and the facts are proving me right,â Trump said, though the facts are obviously not proving him rightâ¦
What will Cheney say?
With the 1/6 anniversary on Thursday, Rep. Liz Cheney is booked on multiple networks this week, including Fox: She is slated to speak with Bret Baier on âSpecial Reportâ Thursday evening. She has not hesitated to call out Fox on the networkâs airwaves in the pastâ¦
Stop calling it a news network
On a related note: Iâll reiterate that itâs time for actual news organizations to stop calling Fox a news network. Itâs not. Itâs a right-wing talk channel that has spent the past year misleading viewers about January 6 with a flood of lies and conspiracy theories designed to sanitize the events of that day. That has happened all while the networkâs top hosts, as we now have evidence of, privately knew the truth about what happened. A news orgâs primary job is to inform viewers with the best version of the truth. What Fox has repeatedly done â on pretty much every major topic â is to misinformâ¦