Print

NYT chief executive warns Trump is deploying ‘anti-press playbook’

The chief executive officer of the New York Times, Meredith Kopit Levien, said the company would “not be cowed” by U.S. President Donald Trump’s $15-billion lawsuit against the newspaper, the Financial Times reported on Wednesday.

The suit is the latest in Trump’s flurry of legal attacks on media during his second term, including a $10-billion defamation case against the Wall Street Journal in July.

The lawsuit was legally baseless, Levien told a Financial Times conference in remarks the paper called her first public utterance on the matter.

“The lawsuit has no merit. It lacks any legitimate legal claims. I believe its purpose is to stifle independent journalism, to deter the kind of fact-based reporting that the Times and other institutions are known for.”

She added, “There is an anti-press playbook at this point  . . . The New York Times will not be cowed by this.”

The White House did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

In Monday’s suit, Trump accused the paper of maliciously publishing articles and a book filled with “repugnant distortions and fabrications about President Trump”.

In response to a Reuters request for comment on the filing, the paper said on Tuesday the lawsuit had no legitimate legal claims and was a bid to stifle and discourage independent reporting.

(Reuters)

RELATED ARTICLES

47 mins ago | Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese

“Months ahead may not be easy,” says Australian PM Albanese as fuel supplies get disrupted amid West Asia crisis

Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese on Wednesday in his address to the nation said that the months ahead might not be easy. Albanese said that on Monday, National Cabinet adopted the National Fuel Security Plan, which would help Australians i...

2 hours ago | Palestinians

Jailed Palestinians fear death by hanging without due process under new Israeli law

Palestinians in the occupied West Bank voiced fears on Tuesday that their jailed relatives could be hanged without due process after Israel adopted a new law making the death penalty the default sentence for Palestinians convicted of lethal attacks. ...

2 hours ago | King Charles

King Charles to pay state visit to US as UK seeks to mollify Trump

King Charles will make a state visit to the United States in late April, Buckingham Palace said on Tuesday, a high-profile trip that the British government hopes will help to repair relations with Donald Trump, damaged by the Iran war. Charles and h...