Study: 42 percent of Republicans believe accurate but negative stories qualify as 'fake news'
By Erik Wemple January 16 at 11:45 AM
All those media-trust studies have a tendency toward the rote. Yes, we already knew that the public had little trust in the countrys journalistic organs. Yes, we knew that finding credible sources could be a harrowing pursuit for the public. Yes, we knew that an increasing portion of the U.S. public felt that the news was biased.
Yet this nugget from a new Gallup-Knight Foundation survey just about knocked the Erik Wemple Blog out of a decade-long media-research torpor:
Four in 10 [or 42 percent of] Republicans consider accurate news stories that cast a politician or political group in a negative light to always be fake news. [The corresponding figure for Democrats is 17 percent.]
Perhaps President Trumps associates should place that data point in his daily briefing packet so that he can brag about it. Theres precedent for that, after all: Back in September 2016, a Gallup poll found cratering public trust in the media. Asked about that situation, Trump despaired not. I think I had a lot to do with that poll
because Ive exposed the media. If you look at the New York Times, and The Washington Post, and if you look at others: the level of dishonesty is enormous. Its so dishonest. I can do something thats wonderful and they make it sound terrible,
Trump said in an interview.
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https://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/erik-wemple/wp/2018/01/16/study-42-percent-of-republicans-believe-accurate-but-negative-stories-qualify-as-fake-news