Zurawik: Sinclair, Eric Bolling provide platform for those trying to undo Biden's victory

Photo by Eduardo Munoz Alvarez of The Associated Press / In this Aug. 20, 2020, file photo, President Donald Trump's former chief strategist, Steve Bannon, speaks with reporters in New York.
Photo by Eduardo Munoz Alvarez of The Associated Press / In this Aug. 20, 2020, file photo, President Donald Trump's former chief strategist, Steve Bannon, speaks with reporters in New York.

Early in Donald Trump's presidency, I said that he was on a fast train to infamy. I might have been wrong about the speed of that train, but not about its destination. And, as Trump refuses to acknowledge the former vice president's election victory, he cements his place in a special hall of presidential shame.

But what about those who are enabling Trump, like former New York Mayor Rudy Giuliani, former federal prosecutor Sidney Powell, former Breitbart News CEO Steve Bannon and many other GOP politicians, including Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell? And what about those who provide a media platform for Trump's disinformation, lies and attempts to disenfranchise millions of voters?

One of the primary providers of a national platform for those pushing Trump's unfounded claims of dark conspiracies and epic fraud in the presidential election is the Maryland-based Sinclair Broadcast Group with its weekly program "America This Week," hosted by Eric Bolling.

On last week's show, Bannon, a former senior adviser to Trump, who now co-hosts a podcast, "War Room: Pandemic," was featured. In his interview, Bannon spread baseless allegations of election fraud.

"The Democrats and the Democratic Party and their allies are trying to steal this election, the victory from President Trump," Bannon told Bolling. "President Trump and his supporters won an incredible victory on Nov. 3 on legitimate, real votes, legal votes. We have to close on that victory. We cannot back off."

In an emailed statement to The Sun, a Sinclair spokesman characterized Bolling's show as "a political talk show, not a news program, that brings on a diversity of opinions whether they be left, right or center. Eric felt that the opinions of people seemingly familiar with President Trump's legal strategy, as well as the other side, are worthy of discussion given current events."

Bolling and his program, you might also recall, came under fire in July when video was posted of an upcoming show that included a segment featuring an unfounded conspiracy theory suggesting Dr. Fauci was involved in creating COVID-19. At the time, Sinclair pulled back broadcasting the segment in the face of fierce criticism following a CNN report on it after the video was posted.

The week before he gave Bannon a platform, Bolling interviewed Giuliani, the lead attorney on Trump's courtroom effort to upend Biden's victory with unsupported claims of widespread voter fraud. I think more than enough has already been written and said about Giuliani following his surreal performance during a news conference last week that featured him quoting dialogue from the movie "My Cousin Vinny" with rivulets of hair dye or something else running down his face.

Enough, too, of Powell and her unsupported claims, in an interview with Bolling posted on YouTube, that communist interests in Venezuela, China and elsewhere used a secret algorithm to hack into voting machines and change votes for Trump to ones for Biden.

Several pundits have used the term "clown car" to describe those working to overturn the results of the general election. But clowns sometimes make us laugh in a good way. There is nothing funny or good about the damage Trump, his allies and media enablers like Sinclair's Bolling are doing to our democracy.

The Baltimore Sun

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