TV hosts react to Trump : ‘What I just saw gave me wrong kind of chills’

US television reaction to US president’s extraordinary 23-minute news conference

After US president Donald Trump argued with the press about protests in Charlottesville, American TV anchors reacted to the president's rhetoric. Video: Fox/CNN

“What I just saw,” a visibly stunned Chuck Todd said on MSNBC, “gave me the wrong kind of chills. Honestly, I’m a bit shaken by what I just heard.”

“I’m still in the phase where I’m wondering if it was actually real life,” said the Fox News host Kat Timpf, unable to disguise her disgust. “I have too much eye makeup on to start crying right now.”

And on CNN, as the camera cut away from US president Donald Trump’s extraordinary 23-minute news conference at Trump Tower, the anchor Jake Tapper could not contain his astonishment. “Wow,” he said. “That was something else.”

For a few visceral minutes on Tuesday, television's partisan lines dissolved as dumbfounded anchors reacted on-air, some in clearly personal ways, to Mr Trump's fiery remarks, in which the president seemed to cast equal blame on white supremacists and the demonstrators who marched against them during the weekend's deadly clash in Charlottesville, Virginia.

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On Fox News, normally a redoubt of Trump support, the 5pm co-hosts of “The Specialists” shook their heads, with the anchor Guy Benson saying that Trump “lost me” when he insisted that some “very fine people” participated in the white supremacist rally.

“They were chanting things like, ‘Jews will not replace us,’” Benson said. “There’s nothing good about that.” His co-host, Timpf, a conservative pundit who contributes to National Review Online, exhaled deeply. “It was one of the biggest messes that I’ve ever seen,” she said. “I can’t believe it happened.”

Disbelief dominated the early reaction on CNN and MSNBC, too, when Tapper ended his afternoon show by directly addressing viewers. “To anybody out there watching today who is confused and thinks, ‘I thought that the Klan and neo-Nazis and white supremacists, I thought there was no debate about this thing among civilized people’ ? there isn’t a debate about it,” he said.

Like many of Trump’s dramatic moments, Tuesday’s impromptu question-and-answer session unspooled on cable television. But as the president’s exchanges grew testier, ABC and CBS cut into regular programming to carry the news conference, adding millions of households to the audience.

Later, the network evening newscasts ran long, unexpurgated clips of Trump’s appearance, rather than the usual short clips. CBS devoted its entire half-hour “Evening News” to the president’s comments and the aftermath of the weekend’s rioting.

Other Americans learned of the events through online sites more sympathetic to Trump, including Breitbart News, which heralded the news conference as a triumph. “Potus Comes Roaring Back With Press Smackdown at Trump Tower,” ran the bright-red headline on the right-wing site.

The president's use of the term "alt-left" on Tuesday to describe liberal protesters echoed recent coverage on Fox News and some right-wing sites, where the term had gained currency in the last several days. "President Donald Trump blasted establishment and left-wing media on Tuesday afternoon for failing to report the facts on violent left-wing protesters in Charlottesville," read the lead story on Breitbart.

Trump has caused a rift in the conservative media, a tension on vivid display during a Fox News exchange between the commentators Charles Krauthammer and Laura Ingraham.

Ingraham, a Trump supporter who has been courted by the White House, allowed that the president's remarks on Tuesday might have hurt his agenda. But she also offered a partial defence, saying of Trump, "He made some points that were factually right."

Krauthammer retorted, “What Trump did today was a moral disgrace,” saying that the president had broken from his predecessors who recognized the history of civil rights. “I’m not going to pass moral judgment on whether Donald Trump is morally on the same plane as you are, Charles,” Ingraham replied, adding, “We have to be honest about the evil of racism and the evil of a far left that is trying to tear down both history and intimidate free speech in the country.”

By prime time, TV's usual divides had returned. Anderson Cooper on CNN opened his show by bluntly saying, "A few hours ago, the president of the United States revealed so clearly who and what he really is." "Has any president in modern history lied so frequently and so fast as this one?" Cooper asked. Fox News had a different take. Tucker Carlson said Trump "fired back at the media" and then went on to discuss famous historical figures, including Thomas Jefferson and Plato, who owned slaves.

New York Times