Accusing the New York Times of ‘Treason,’ Trump Crosses a Line   
https://www.wsj.com/articles/accusin...ne-11560985187
 The Founders considered it the gravest of crimes. Tossing the charge around is irresponsible and wrong.
                                                                                                             By A.G. Sulzberger                   
                           June 19, 2019 6:59 pm ET                    
            
                                                                                      First it was “the failing New York Times.” Then “fake news.”  Then “enemy of the people.” President Trump’s escalating attacks on the  New York Times have paralleled his broader barrage on American media.  He’s gone from misrepresenting our business, to assaulting our  integrity, to demonizing our journalists with a phrase that’s been used  by generations of demagogues.
            Now the president has escalated his attacks even further, accusing the Times of a crime so grave it is punishable by death. 
            On Saturday, Mr. Trump said the Times had committed “a virtual act of treason.” The charge, levied on                   Twitter             ,         was in response to an article about American cyber incursions into  the Russian electrical grid that his own aides had assured our  reporters raised no national-security concerns.
           Few paid much attention. Many news organizations, including the  Times, determined the accusation wasn’t even worth reporting, a sign of  how inured we’ve grown to such rhetorical recklessness. But this new  attack crosses a dangerous line in the president’s campaign against a  free and independent press.
           Treason is the only crime explicitly defined in the U.S.  Constitution. The Founding Fathers knew the word’s history as a weapon  wielded by tyrants to justify the persecution and execution of enemies.  They made its definition immutable—Article III reads: “Treason against  the United States, shall consist only in levying War against them, or in  adhering to their Enemies, giving them Aid and Comfort”—to ensure that  it couldn’t be abused by politicians for self-serving attacks on rivals  or critics. The crime is almost never prosecuted, but Mr. Trump has used  the word dozens of times.
           There is no more serious charge a commander in chief can make  against an independent news organization. Which presents a troubling  question: What would it look like for Mr. Trump to escalate his attacks  on the press further? Having already reached for the most incendiary  language available, what is left but putting his threats into action? 
There’s evidence that’s already happening. The administration  has waged an aggressive legal campaign against journalists. Leak  investigations, which were already on the rise under President Obama,  have surged. Government regulatory powers have been misused to retaliate  against news organizations, such as the attempt to block                   AT&T                      from acquiring CNN’s parent company, Time Warner. Most recently,  the precedent-shattering use of the Espionage Act against Julian Assange  for publishing classified information has raised fears that the Justice  Department seeks not merely to punish illegal hacking but effectively  to criminalize standard reporting practices.
                      Meanwhile, the president’s rhetorical attacks continue to  foster a climate in which trust in journalists is eroding and violence  against them is growing. More than a quarter of Americans—and a  plurality of Republicans—now agree  that “the news media is the enemy of the American people” and “the  president should have the authority to close news outlets engaged in bad  behavior.” A world-wide surge of attacks has made this the most  dangerous year for journalists on record. This is particularly true in  parts of the world where pursuing the truth already carries great risks,  as news reporters and editors experience rising levels of censorship,  harassment, imprisonment and murder. 
           I met with the president in the Oval Office earlier this year  and told him directly that authoritarian leaders around the world, with  growing impunity, are employing his words to undermine free expression.  The president expressed concern and insisted he wanted to be viewed as a  defender of the free press. But in the same conversation, he took  credit for the term “fake news,” a phrase that has now been wielded by  dozens of leaders across five continents to justify everything from the  passage of anti-free-speech laws in Egypt to the takeover of independent  news organizations in Hungary to a crackdown on investigations into  genocide in Myanmar. 
America’s Founders believed that a free press was essential to  democracy, and the American experience has proved them right. Journalism  guards freedoms, binds together communities, ferrets out corruption and  injustice, and ensures the flow of information that powers everything  from elections to the economy. Freedom of the press has been fiercely  defended by nearly all American presidents regardless of politics or  party affiliation, and regardless of their own complaints about  coverage.
           There are moments when the press and the government are  legitimately at odds, never more so than when the press’s conviction  about the public’s right to know collides with the government’s  assessment of the importance of maintaining secrecy. Journalists take  seriously the concern that their reporting may jeopardize national  security, and at the Times we have withheld details or delayed  publication when government officials convinced us there was a danger of  loss of life or damage to intelligence operations. 
           The story that prompted the president’s attack was no  exception. As the Times prepared the story for publication, our reporter  contacted officials at the White House National Security Council, the  National Security Agency and the U.S. Cyber Command and gave them the  opportunity to raise any national-security concerns about the story.  They told us they did not have any. Shortly after publication, the  president accused the Times of treason. 
Over 167 years, through 33 presidential administrations, the  Times has sought to serve America and its citizens by seeking the truth  and helping people understand the world. There is nothing we take more  seriously than doing this work fairly and accurately, even when we are  under attack. Mr. Trump’s campaign against journalists should concern  every patriotic American. A free, fair and independent press is  essential to our country’s strength and vitality and to every freedom  that makes it great.
            
Mr. Sulzberger is publisher of the New York Times. 
           
              Appeared in the June 20, 2019, print edition as 'With Talk of ‘Treason,’ Trump Crosses a Line.'