On Saturday, after days of uncertainty, CNN became the first major news network to call the presidential race for Democratic nominee Joe Biden. Within minutes, NBC, CBS, The Associated Press, and finally Fox News followed CNN’s lead. This type of call would be easy and uncontroversial in an ordinary election year -- but as it has proved in myriad ways, 2020 is not an ordinary year.
By the time the race was called, President Donald Trump’s campaign was already days into a barrage of unfounded legal challenges to the vote totals. Trump wasn’t about to give up, and neither were his supporters in pro-Trump media. An interesting narrative emerged on the right that news outlets should not be calling elections at all; that they should instead wait for states to certify results.
“Attention media! Why are you claiming Biden is president-elect when not a single state has certified electors?” tweeted right-wing Fox News host Mark Levin. “Why are you ignoring the Constitution?”
“The media do not get to select our president. The American people get to elect our president,” said Sen. Ted Cruz (R-TX) in an interview with Fox News’ Maria Bartiromo. (Cruz, like other Republican politicians, has been publicly pushed by Trump and his family to mount a defense of the president’s attempt to cling to power.)
The Trump campaign, pro-Trump commentators Diamond and Silk, former CNN contributor Paris Dennard, Judicial Watch President Tom Fitton, Newsmax correspondent Emerald Robinson, former Trump administration acting Director of National Intelligence Richard Grenell, and right-wing radio host Steve Deace were among those who either rejected reports of Biden’s win on the basis that the press doesn’t decide the winners of elections or offered some convoluted explanation involving the fact that state results hadn’t yet been certified -- a task which won’t be completed until next month.
This argument is bizarre and disingenuous.
News outlets go to great lengths to explain how they go about declaring winners and what those announcements mean. After calling the state of Pennsylvania for Biden, which put him over the threshold of 270 electoral votes needed to win the election, the AP provided a thorough explanation for why it believed that Trump would not be able to make up the necessary ground for a come-from-behind victory.