Noel King & Robert Smith, NPR Podcast #758, Can Trump Take the Money, NPR: Planet
Money (Mar. 10, 2017), http://tinyurl.com/zg6cgte.
Noel King: Presidents and other elected officials have been so
paranoid that they might seem to be in violation of [the Foreign Emoluments
Clause] that they do everything they can to avoid it. In fact, in the handful
of times it does come up it sounds ridiculous.
…
Noel King: Or if Presidents or other U.S. officials do accept
gifts, they do what the [Foreign Emoluments] [C]lause says they got to do, they
ask Congress for permission.
Dear Noel,
I listened to your full podcast. In fact,
I listened to it twice. And then I delayed two days before writing you.
In your podcast (at 10:20ff), you state
that Presidents have done “everything they can to avoid” application of the Foreign
Emoluments Clause “or … they ask Congress for permission [to keep the gift].”
I find your willingness to make this claim
more than a little troubling. You interviewed me for well over an hour, and you
and I discussed in detail President George Washington’s diplomatic gifts: gifts
which he received, acknowledged, and kept, absent any request for congressional
consent.
You say that Presidents have been paranoid.
You say that Presidents have done everything to avoid application of
the clause. But that is simply not true. President Washington did not do anything.
Washington just kept the gifts, including, a full length framed portrait of
Louis XVI, which remains on display to this day at his Mt Vernon estate. This
was diplomatic gift sent to President Washington at the direction of the French
government through the French ambassador. Your podcast is over 20 minutes long,
and yet, you could not even find a few seconds to let your listeners know that presidential
practice is not uniform and also that there are academics who disagree with the
merits of the legal arguments which form the basis of CREW’s lawsuit against
President Trump. That result is more than disappointing; it is an unfair
result. It is unfair because there are two sides to this story, and you chose
to present only one, and you did so after reaching out to me, after asking me for
an interview, and after taking a good deal of my time.
Why is it reasonable for you to spend all your
airtime considering Ambassador Franklin and President Martin Van Buren, but not
President George Washington and Secretary Alexander Hamilton—except that you
chose to present only evidence supporting only one point of view?
What happens if CREW’s lawsuit fails, and fails on the merits, unrelated to standing? What happens if the federal court
disagrees with the positions you put forth in your podcast, e.g., your asserting
that emoluments means profits (as opposed to alternative and
more limited definitions suggested by other academics, e.g., Professors Grewal and Natelson), and, e.g., your asserting that the Foreign Emoluments Clause
applies to the President? If that should happen, then your listeners might
begin to wonder: Why should they listen to NPR?, Why should they donate to
public radio?, and, finally, Why should public radio receive taxpayer funded
subsidies?—if public radio is determined to present only one side of issues
that quite clearly have two sides (as even The NY Times has managed to
acknowledge and report on multiple occasions). Now you might say that such a
result, as I suggest here, i.e., CREW’s losing on the merits, would be wholly
unexpected. But lately, unexpected things have been happening with some unexpected
regularity: e.g., Brexit and the election of President Trump. Perhaps that is
something you might want to consider when you next consider exercising
editorial discretion to report only one side of an issue with two sides.
Seth
Citation: Seth Barrett Tillman, NPR’s Planet Money, President Trump, and the
Foreign Emoluments Clause, New Reform
Club (Mar. 12, 2017). [here]
What made you think that anyone at NPR would fairly present something that does not fit their approved narrative?
ReplyDeleteOr were you merely playing the game so that you could have yelling rights, later?
Every Demo operative at NPR and PBS has zero commitment to truth or fairness, and total slavish loyalty to the current Party line. I suspect Seth was bending over backwards to present his views. Seth is not yelling, he is offering a factual account. It is way past time to cut off every penny of tax dollars from these cesspits of slime. Let Soros and other globalhomos fund them.
ReplyDeleteIt is unfair because there are two sides to this story, and you chose to present only one, and you did so after reaching out to me, after asking me for an interview, and after taking a good deal of my time.
ReplyDeleteswine
defund the lot of 'em
make 'em earn an honest living