Donald Trump calls on The New York Times to apologize for 'getting years of Trump coverage wrong'
President-elect Donald Trump called out The New York Times on Tuesday in a post on Truth Social, calling on them to apologize for years of "Trump coverage" he said they got wrong.
President-elect Donald Trump called on The New York Times to "apologize" on Tuesday and said the outlet got "years" of coverage about him "so wrong."
"Will the failing New York Times apologize to its readers for getting years of ‘Trump' coverage so wrong. They write such phony ‘junk,’ knowing full well how incorrect it is, only meaning to demean," Trump wrote on Truth Social.
He also appeared to call out Maggie Haberman, a senior political correspondent at the New York Times, who has focused much of her reporting on the president-elect.
"They do no fact checking, because facts don’t matter to them. I don’t believe I’ve had a legitimately good story in the NYT for years, AND YET I WON, IN RECORD FASHION, THE MOST CONSEQUENTIAL PRESIDENTIAL ELECTION IN DECADES. WHERE IS THE APOLOGY?" Trump continued.
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The Times responded in a statement to Fox News Digital.
"As an independent news organization The New York Times doesn’t produce stories that are ‘good’ or ‘bad’, only reporting that is true. Maggie Haberman and her colleagues have an unrivaled record of providing deeply-reported and authoritative coverage. Every president has complaints about coverage but this work has been widely recognized as fair, accurate and unflinching," the spokesperson said.
Ahead of the election, Trump spoke to Fox News' Howard Kurtz and the then-presidential candidate also criticized The New York Times.
"The New York Times is totally, in my opinion, corrupt," he said.
The outlet came under fire on social media for a fact-check of RFK Jr.'s claim that Froot Loops uses different ingredients in their U.S. product versus their Canadian product.
"Mr. Kennedy has singled out Froot Loops as an example of a product with too many artificial ingredients, questioning why the Canadian version has fewer than the U.S. version," the Times' report read. "But he was wrong. The ingredient list is roughly the same, although Canada’s has natural colorings made from blueberries and carrots while the U.S. product contains red dye 40, yellow 5 and blue 1 as well as Butylated hydroxytoluene, or BHT, a lab-made chemical that is used 'for freshness,' according to the ingredient label."
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According to a statement given to The Washington Post by Kennedy spokesperson, Stefanie Spear, Kennedy was referring to the differences in food dyes in the American and Canadian versions of the cereal.
The NYT's fact-check, which seemed to prove rather than disprove Kennedy's point about artificial ingredients being included in the U.S. version of the cereal, drew critics to mock the paper.
Podcast host Joe Rogan offered commentary on the fact-check during one of his shows.
"The fact check is so dumb because the fact check says it's not correct, they have the same ingredients… except for these harmful chemicals," he said. "That’s the New York f---ing Times."
Fox News' Kristine Parks contributed to this report.