Trump Aide Says Media Need to "Clean House"

Edited by Pavel Jacomino
2017-01-30 19:50:13

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Kellyanne Conway, Senior Counselor to U.S. President Donald Trump

Washington, January 30 (RHC)-- Kellyanne Conway, the senior counselor to U.S. President Donald Trump, is calling on networks to fire the reporters that “talk smack” about him.  In an interview on Fox News Sunday, she asked: "Who is cleaning house?  Which one is going to be the first network to get rid of these people, the people who think things were just not true?"

The key figure in the administration recently drew attention by bringing up her "alternative facts," whose media coverage she criticized in the Sunday interview.  "I went on three network shows and spoke for 35 minutes on three network Sunday shows.  You know what got picked?  The fact that I said 'alternative facts,' not the fact that I ripped a new one to some of those hosts that they never cover the facts that matter," said Conway.

And Trump's senior adviser added: "Not one network person has been let go.  Not one silly political analyst and pundit who talked smack all day long about Donald Trump has been let go.  She said that she was "too polite" to mention their names, but they know who they are, and they are all wondering who will be the first to go.

Describing anti-Trump news and analyses “fake” has been on top of the Trump team’s agenda since the real estate mogul and reality TV star started campaigning for the 2016 presidential election.

During an NBC’s “Meet the Press” interview, Conway defended a false statement about the size of the crowd at Trump’s inauguration ceremony announced by White House Press Secretary Sean Spicer, noting that the new administration has its own “alternative facts.”  She said: “You're saying it's a falsehood, and ... our press secretary, Sean Spicer, gave alternative facts to that."

The term “alternative facts” has naturally started to mean falsehood in a mocking way and now has its own dedicated Wikipedia entry, with credits to Conway, where it is associated with terms such as Big Lie, Deception, Dog Whistling, Doublespeak, Factoid, and Fallacy.



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