Trump attacks CNN over reporting on false voter fraud claims
"[W]hat PROOF do u have DonaldTrump did not suffer from millions of FRAUD votes? Journalist? Do your job!" read the first post that Trump retweeted. "Just another generic CNN part time wannabe journalist!," read the second.
One post Trump retweeted came from a Twitter user whose bio says he`s 16, who, like the others, called Zeleny a "bad reporter" because he did not have evidence that Trump was not a victim of voter fraud, a double-negative reasoning used to defend many conspiracy theories.
Finally, Trump issued his own attack on CNN: ".@CNN is so embarrassed by their total (100%) support of Hillary Clinton, and yet her loss in a landslide, that they don`t know what to do," he wrote.
A CNN spokesperson declined to comment. Zeleny responded to Trump with a request for examples of the fraud.
Trump`s initial claim that Clinton`s victory was a result of "millions of people who voted illegally" had been promoted on conspiracy theory sites like Infowars.com before Trump himself tweeted it on Sunday. The claim appears to have been first promoted by Gregg Phillips, a conservative activist with more than 26,000 Twitter followers.
Since Trump tweeted the conspiracy theory, CNN anchors and reporters have repeatedly stressed that there is no evidence to support the claim. Online, CNN`s headline read, "Trump falsely claims `millions of people who voted illegally` cost him popular vote."
Election officials in California and Virginia have also called Trump`s claims "unsubstantiated" and "unfounded."
Trump`s penchant for peddling conspiracy theories and attacking critics and media organizations on Twitter is unprecedented, and has been cause for concern among journalists and media watchdogs who are wrestling with how to cover a president who is a leading source of misinformation.