The Western Journal

WaPo Wins Pulitzer After Minimizing Trump Assassination Attempt

The article discusses The Washington Post’s recent Pulitzer Prize win for its coverage of the attempted assassination of Donald Trump on July 13, 2024. The Post’s reporting described the incident in a vague manner,referring to it as “loud noises” at a rally,despite the situation’s severity,which included gunfire that resulted in a fatality. Critics argue that this downplayed the violence of the event adn questioned the media’s credibility. The article highlights that othre news outlets also adopted similar euphemistic narratives around the assassination attempt.The author criticizes the pulitzer prize for endorsing what is framed as a failure in journalistic integrity, suggesting that celebrating such reporting undermines the standards of quality in journalism. The piece concludes with a critique of media practices that prioritize narrative over accurate reporting, implying that this trend damages public trust in news organizations.


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On Monday The Washington Post announced that it won a Pulitzer Prize in the breaking news category for its coverage of the July 13, 2024, attempted assassination of Donald Trump.

The “coverage” in question?

That Trump was “taken away after loud noises at rally,” according to a July 13 headline.

According to the Post’s self-congratulatory write-up on its award, WaPo’s “live-updates file” — from which the aforementioned headline came — earned the paper what was once journalism’s top honor, the Pulitzer.

“The Post’s first report from Butler published almost immediately, at 6:21 p.m., in a live-updates file,” the article reads. “The source of the loud noises was not immediately clear.”

But they weren’t just “loud noises.” They were gunshots that ripped through Trump’s ear and killed firefighter and father Corey Comperatore, who died shielding his family from the assassin’s bullet. In fact, the Post knew the gravity of the situation because it published that headline with the featured photo showing blood pouring down the side of Trump’s face.

Yet, the Post still went with — and won an award for — that angle. Two days later, the paper’s Paul Farhi defended the media’s coverage that deliberately downplayed the horrific event, saying media outlets “reported cautiously about what had occurred” since “it wasn’t immediately clear what was unfolding.”

“But being right rather than first with the news wasn’t good enough for many readers,” Farhi wrote. He later paraphrased Poynter Report media columnist Tom Jones, who argued that “news organizations can tolerate criticism … but inaccurate reporting destroys their most precious asset: their credibility.”

As if the Post has ever cared about accurate reporting.

That The Washington Post can receive a Pulitzer Prize for describing an attempted presidential assassination as “loud noises” isn’t just a media failure — it’s the Pulitzer Prize’s final self-immolation. If journalism is supposed to be the first rough draft of history, the Pulitzer just gave its stamp of approval to one of the most dishonest lines ever written. If soft-pedaling political violence earns the highest award in American journalism, then the Pulitzer is no longer a mark of excellence — it’s a trophy for narrative loyalty.

The Post wasn’t the only outlet to push the narrative downplaying the assassination attempt — though not every other outlet was fortunate enough to win a prize for doing so.

After news immediately broke, CNN claimed Trump’s speech was “interrupted by Secret Service,” as reported in these pages by Kamden Mulder.

USA Today claimed — as reported by Mulder — that Trump was “removed from stage by Secret Service after loud noises startle[d] former president.”

NBC News stated that the Secret Service “rush[ed] Trump off stage” in response to “popping noises.”




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One Comment

  1. Another once-prestigious award has now been reduced to a Politically Correct participation prize.

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