Trump trials should be televised for all to see
By BILL COTTERELL
City and State
Donald Trump has finally said something almost everybody agrees with — except for a few guys whose opinions are the only ones that really matter.
Reckless, purposely provocative rhetoric is a mainstay of Trump’s comeback campaign. He may horrify about half the voters, who wouldn’t vote for him at gunpoint, and delight the other half, many of whom share a cult-like devotion to him, but being outrageous is his schtick.
Last week his lawyers signaled his acceptance of video cameras in the Washington courtroom where Trump will be tried for inciting the Jan. 6 riots at the U.S. Capitol. That’s a reversal, though hardly a surprise, as Trump previously took no position on televising his trials.
Unfortunately, federal rules generally prohibit cameras in courtrooms. Despite Trump’s agreement, and entreaties by news organizations, the prosecutors are not interested in televising this unprecedented, extremely important case. The U.S. Supreme Court could change that, if it weren’t so mired in its own hide-bound tradition.
Trump’s trial in Atlanta, on state charges of trying to put up a bogus slate of Georgia electors, will be broadcast. The rules in many states, including Florida, permit cameras in courts, unlike the stuck-in-the-fifties feds.
Times and technology have changed. A half-century ago, TV cameras were bigger than a large suitcase, and were rolled around on tall tripods, with light and sound equipment that took up a few feet of surrounding space. Now, broadcast-quality video can be made on a cell phone, and even though the networks would use equipment more sophisticated than what’s in your pocket, camera are unobtrusive.
Reporters are ordered to keep their seats and maintain a judicial decorum — no live stand-ups in the center aisle, no sidelines interviews or zooming in on the judge at moments of high drama. This isn’t a football game.
There are channels like Court TV that jump between two or three trials a day, offering live testimony and legal analysis. If it gets too showbiz, the plug can be pulled. The court could even impose a 30-second delay and have a single cable feed to a nearby press room, where all the media could download video.
The executive and legislative branches do it all the time.
The Justice Department has three basic reasons for the ban on televising trials: (A) We’ve always done it this way, (B) We don’t want to change and (C) you can’t make us.
But what great harm would befall the country, if we could see the trial?
If the judiciary fears a bold new precedent in doing something state courts have done for decades, it could make this a one-time exception. There has never been a president like Trump, never been legal entanglements like he’s produced — four criminal cases with 91 counts, plus a New York civil action — and there’s never been a defendant running for president while on trial.
Trump’s behavior in the New York civil trial, calling the judge a partisan hack and the state attorney general a deranged racist, prompted a gag order. His motion to admit cameras to the Washington federal trial showed the same belligerent bluster. The former reality show star clearly wants his act on TV.
In a motion seeking to televise the whole show, Trump’s lawyers wrote, “In sum, President Trump absolutely agrees — and, in fact, demands — that these proceedings should be fully televised so that the American public can see first hand that this case, just like others, is nothing more than a dreamt-up, unconstitutional charade that should never be allowed to happen again.”
But it could backfire. Television exposed Sen. Joe McCarthy as a thug whose anti-communist crusade was a sham. Cameras brought us the truths of the Watergate hearings and the Iran-Contra inquiry, as well as several House and Senate hearings today. TV could amplify Trump’s lying, or show him to be Joe McCarthy in an expensive suit.
That Trump would love to turn the calm, contemplative air of the courtroom into something like a pro-wrestling spectacle — or a Trump campaign rally — is regrettable, but no reason to keep the cameras out.
Bill Cotterell is a retired Capitol reporter for United Press International and the Tallahassee Democrat. He can be reached at bcotterell@cityandstatefl.com.