New York Post Editorial Blasts Trump’s Fraud Claims
âGive it up, Mr. President â for your sake and the nationâs.â
In a blunt editorial, Rupert Murdochâs New York Post, a tabloid that promoted Donald J. Trump long before he went into politics, told the president to end his attempts to overturn the results of the 2020 presidential election.
The Monday front page showed a downcast president and the all-caps headline âStop the Insanity.â The publicationâs website also highlighted the editorial, written by The Postâs editorial board, featuring it at the top of the home page.
âMr. President, itâs time to end this dark charade,â began the editorial.
It blasted Mr. Trumpâs suggestion that the House and Senate should try to disrupt the tallying of Electoral College votes on Jan. 6. It also ridiculed Sidney Powell, a former lawyer for the Trump campaign who pushed conspiracy theories about a Venezuelan plot to rig voting machines in the United States. And it said that a suggestion by Michael T. Flynn, the former lieutenant general who served as Mr. Trumpâs first national security adviser, to impose martial law was âtantamount to treason.â
âYou have tweeted that, as long as Republicans have âcourage,â they can overturn the results and give you four more years in office,â the Post editorial said.
âIn other words,â it continued, âyouâre cheering for an undemocratic coup.â
The Post helped make Mr. Trump a New York celebrity decades ago, and it was an early backer of his political ambitions, endorsing him in the Republican primary ahead of the 2016 election.
In January 2019, as Mr. Trumpâs re-election campaign was under way, the paper brought back its former longtime editor in chief, Col Allan, an Australian tabloid wizard who was once seen wearing a Make America Great Again cap in the newsroom. Mr. Allan, in the role of newsroom adviser, helped shape the paperâs election coverage, and The Postâs editorial board gave Mr. Trump its endorsement in a front-page editorial on Oct. 26 headlined âMake America Great Again, Again.â
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Since Election Day, however, The Postâs tone has changed.
In an interview with The Times shortly after Joseph R. Biden Jr. emerged as the winner of the presidential election, Mr. Allan said he was calling an end to his four-decade career at Murdoch papers in the United States and Australia. And on Nov. 7, The Postâs editorial board published some tough-love advice to Mr. Trump: âPresident Trump, your legacy is secure â stop the âstolen electionâ rhetoric.â
The conservative editorial page of The Wall Street Journal, another paper controlled by Mr. Murdochâs News Corp, has taken a similar line. âPresident Trump accomplished a great deal in four years, but as he leaves office he canât seem to help reminding Americans why they denied him a second term,â began a Dec. 20 editorial headlined âTrumpâs Bad Exit.â
It concluded: âMr. Trump doesnât want to admit he lost, and he can duck the inauguration if he likes. But his sore loser routine is beginning to grate even on millions who voted for him.â
Television personalities in the Murdoch media empire have also changed their tune.
Maria Bartiromo and Lou Dobbs, of Fox Business, and Jeanine Pirro, of Fox News, seemed to back attempts by the president and his acolytes to undo the election results â until recently. This month, the programs hosted by the three anchors included three-minute segments intended to debunk on-air claims that the 2020 vote had been rigged. The segments ran after Antonio Mugica, the head of the election technology company Smartmatic, threatened legal action against media companies that had broadcast statements suggesting that the company had a role in the vote fraud.
In its front-page attack on Monday, The Postâs editorial board, run by its longtime editor, Mark Q. Cunningham, appealed directly to Mr. Trump.
âWe understand, Mr. President, that youâre angry that you lost,â it said. âBut to continue down this road is ruinous.â
âDemocrats will try to write you off as a one-term aberration and, frankly, youâre helping them do it,â the editorial continued. âThe King Lear of Mar-a-Lago, ranting about the corruption of the world.â
In conclusion, it said, âIf you insist on spending your final days in office threatening to burn it all down, that will be how you are remembered. Not as a revolutionary, but as the anarchist holding the match.â