A free press cannot afford to treat that kind of threat as just another outrageous soundbite.
The first response must be radical clarity: explain, relentlessly, to the public why an independent press exists,
who it protects, and how quickly democracies erode when leaders decide which stories are “allowed.”
Journalists must show their work, tighten standards, correct fast, and then stand even firmer when power pushes back.
The second response is solidarity. Newsrooms that normally compete need to link arms: shared statements,
joint investigations, coordinated legal defenses, and unwavering refusal to accept gag orders,
blacklistings, or access-for-obedience deals. Press freedom groups,
local outlets, and national giants should act as one ecosystem, not isolated brands.
When a president hints the rules will change, the press must answer with a simple, united message:
the Constitution says otherwise — and we’re not moving.