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Margaret Sullivan: After a stunning news conference, there’s a newly crucial job for the American press

For the reality-based press, the job will require clarity and moral force, in ways we’re not always all that comfortable with.

U.S. President Donald Trump, left, and Russian President Vladimir Putin attend a press conference after the meeting of U.S. President Donald Trump and Russian President Vladimir Putin at the Presidential Palace in Helsinki, Finland, Monday, July 16, 2018. (AP Photo/Pablo Martinez Monsivais)

It was press conference as national nightmare, summed up succinctly by the BBC on its home page minutes later with this headline: "Trump Sides With Russia Against FBI."

And though Monday’s joint Trump-Putin post-summit appearance in Helsinki was a news conference — with some admirably tough questions from two experienced wire-service reporters — it also was a moment in which no media interpretation was really necessary.

Everything was right out there in the open. Believe your eyes and ears.

As my Washington Post colleague Mark Berman put it on Twitter: "I'm really struck by what a huge story it would be if it emerged that Trump was privately questioning the intel assessment re: Russian meddling and suggesting he buys Russia's denial. Instead, he says it out loud, on TV, while standing next to Putin."

Almost superfluous in the moment, the news media's job became crucially important in the immediate aftermath.

What happened on that stage needs to be made undeniably clear to every American citizen who isn't hopelessly lost in denial. (And clearly, many are.)

That job will fall, in part at least, to the American press, who will find itself in the uncomfortable position of calling a spade a spade, with none of the usual recourse to false equivalence or "both sides with equal weight" coverage.

CNN’s Anderson Cooper led the way with his immediate — and memorable — live assessment: “You have been watching perhaps one of the most disgraceful performances by an American president . . . .”

And others followed suit.

James Fallows of the Atlantic quickly wrote a tough piece: "Never before have I seen an American president consistently, repeatedly, publicly, and shockingly advance the interests of another country over those of his own government and people."

Clearly, not all will be up to the challenge. That, too, was obvious in the moment.

On Fox News, the Trump-favored White House correspondent John Roberts (a very recent beneficiary of White House approval) tried to explain Trump’s words: “He’s developed a little bit of an inroad to Putin ... and he doesn’t want to spoil that by saying he doesn’t believe Putin.”

That Fox News “scored” two Trump interviews for Monday night — one with Sean Hannity and one with Tucker Carlson — is completely predictable, especially with former Fox honcho Bill Shine as the new White House communications czar.

When it comes to Fox and Trump, the answer to the lyric "Will the Circle Be Unbroken" is abundantly obvious.

But for the reality-based press, the job will require clarity and moral force, in ways we're not always all that comfortable with.

Just as it took months to come to terms with referring to Trump's endless falsehoods (when they are clearly intentional) as "lies," we need to get out of our ingrained habits in order to tell this story clearly.

Some signs were encouraging. In The Post, Aaron Blake's analysis told it plainly: "Trump's news conference with Putin was everything Putin could have dreamed" read the headline.

The lead headline on the Guardian US website got right to the point, too: "Trump condemned as treasonous after press conference with Putin."

But the press's default position is to normalize, to represent various points of view with equal weight, to be swayed by the pomp of the presidential office. To act like everything is just as variation on a theme - something we've seen before but maybe in a slightly paler shade.

That's not good enough.

Journalism, writ large, can be proud of The Associated Press' Jon Lemire and Reuters' Jeff Mason, who asked well-honed, incisive questions on Monday and asked them in just the right way. (Historical note: Lemire, back in October of 2016, was thrown out of a room by Trump's campaign people, as the candidate called him a "sleazebag" for asking tough questions about sexual misconduct claims against him.)

Mason and Lemire held Trump's feet to the fire.

If any such pride is to continue in the hours and days ahead, news organizations need to step up to the job of driving home to American citizens the larger picture, too.

It's not enough to offer such pallid assessments as those we've heard too often, that "this is outside the norm," or "there's little precedent for what we're hearing."

Clarity of purpose and moral force are called for. They are not always in ample supply by a too-docile press corps.

Fallows called Monday's press conference a "moment of truth" for Republican lawmakers.

So, too, for American journalists.

| Courtesy Margaret Sullivan, op-ed mug shot.

Margaret Sullivan is The Washington Post’s media columnist. Previously, she was the New York Times public editor, and the chief editor of the Buffalo News, her hometown paper.