OPINION

The March of Death by Anonymous Sources

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CNN host Jim Sciutto was mocked for tweeting two months ago, "Let's please ban the word 'narrative' from our discussion of the news and this president. There is only one version of the facts and the truth. Full stop."

CNN is about the last place you should look for what Sciutto demands of the news media. Full stop.

Networks such as CNN insist the "truth" as they see it must be anointed as "reality" and anything dissenting from that is "misinformation." But what they see are conclusions in search of facts and that there's no time or need to establish those facts in pursuit of the narrative that President Donald Trump is a crook who must be removed from the presidency.

Thus, the dominant narrative of the first two years of the Trump presidency was the accusation of Russia colluding with the Trump campaign ... until it collapsed. The network evening news shows wasted thousands of minutes just oozing with doom for the president. In 2018, the Russiagate stories were 98% negative. Now they're doing it all over again with Ukraine.

All of this is based on what? Evidence provided by whom? How many dozens, maybe hundreds, of television and print reports have been based on "anonymous sources"? How many times have we read about the reporter's conversation with "multiple" or "six" or "more than a dozen" or some such number of sources?

Why can't a single one come forward? Why must we find out, after digging and digging, that their most recent whistleblower has vanished from the scene?

As consumers of "news," it's exhausting to wade through wild quotes accompanied by phrases like "the official spoke on the condition of anonymity to speak candidly." How on Earth would we know if the source was candid? The word, after all, is defined as "the quality of being open and honest in expression." So why not come forward?

On the latest "Fox News Sunday," host Chris Wallace played this swampy game with acting White House chief of staff Mick Mulvaney. "I talked to a very well-connected Republican in Washington this week, somebody whose name you would know well," he promised. The source "says that if the House votes to impeach and it gets to a trial in the Senate, there is now a 20% chance he believes ... enough Republicans will vote with the Democrats to remove the president."

Mulvaney shot back, "Oh, that's just absurd," and tried to move on, but Wallace resisted and the typical TV back-and-forth ensued.

It's time for Team Trump to get smart about this. Mulvaney let Wallace off the hook. Not only should he have refused to answer the question but he also should have put Wallace on the spot instead.

On national television -- live national television -- on Wallace's own show, Mulvaney should have demanded answers to those questions and simply not stopped until the interview was over.

"Who is that source? You attack CNN all day, but you're no different."

"How 'well-connected' is that source of yours? Employee? Childhood friend? Tennis partner? Can't you tell your audience that? Do you even know?"

"How do you know he's telling the truth? Do you have a second source to confirm this? How do you know he's not lying, like so many other anti-Trumpers have?"

"Why won't you give us the name of the person to whom he's connected and who came up with that 20% number? Certainly, you didn't talk to him and he didn't demand anonymity. So who is he? What authority does he have? What's his expertise?"

"Is this the kind of National Enquirer journalism we should now expect from you?"

Mulvaney should have pounded and pounded and pounded. What could Wallace have done about it? Cut him off? That would've made national news -- Wallace's refusal to provide any evidence to back up his attack on Trump.

Team Trump should not consent to any taped news interviews. The interviews should be live, and every single time the reporter plays that "gotcha" game, he should be challenged -- fiercely.

The press would have nowhere to hide.