<![CDATA[Brian Stelter]]><![CDATA[CNN]]><![CDATA[Constitution]]><![CDATA[Donald Trump]]>Featured

Brian Stelter Thinks the Press Needs to Promote ‘Constitution 101’ – Twitchy

CNN senior media analyst Brian Stelter was on air last week, flapping pages around and insisting that President Donald Trump’s executive order to defund PBS and NPR was illegal. As our own Warren Squire reported earlier, over the weekend, both Katherine Maher of NPR and David Brooks of PBS laughably claimed their outlets are “straight down the line.” In early March, Ohio Rep. Jim Jordan told Maher that in the D.C. area, “editorial positions at NPR have 87 registered Democrats and 0 Republicans.” Bill Maher even weighed in, saying, “Give me a break, lady! I mean, they’re crazy far-left.”





We’re not sure where in the Constitution it says that the federal government has to fund NPR and PBS, but Stelter is back with a piece in which he argues the press needs to do “a better job of incorporating Constitution 101” into their coverage.

… purse? All of these questions require some unpacking, some explaining, to answer. But it really is a public service to do so.

 Yes, why did the founders set up a system of checks and balances when unelected judges can block the agenda of the president at every step? Why exactly are activist judges’ power grabs unprecedented?

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… experienced.”

That’s precisely why civics needs to be baked into news coverage.

Deputy Chief of Staff Stephen Miller said last week that school children “will be taught civic values for schools that want federal taxpayer funding,” which Jemele Hill said “should frighten everyone.”

Stelter writes on CNN that “some judges have been doing their part.”









Suddenly, Stelter is concerned about executive overreach and the separation of powers. He’s correct on one point — the media should do a better job of educating people on what the president can do.

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