When conservative commentator and host Rush Limbaugh opened his radio show Monday, indictments had just been made public in Washington, D.C., against President Trump’s former campaign chairman Paul Manafort. Manafort and one of his top lieutenants had been taken into custody on charges of money laundering and tax evasion. Special counsel Robert Mueller had also secured a guilty plea from former Trump campaign aide George Papadopoulos, who admitted to lying to the FBI about contacts with Russia.
But Limbaugh, one of the most influential voices on the right, worked quickly to reframe the day’s developments. “None of this is real,” he insisted. When a listener suggested Mueller had “gone rogue” and might be trying to topple Trump, Limbaugh amplified the fear. “This is the coup. If Hillary had been elected, none of this would be happening, other than they still put Trump in jail as a message to the outsider: Don’t dare try this.”
For weeks, conservative media outlets have echoed these themes, working to discredit Mueller and recycling Trump’s own tweets describing the probe as a political witch hunt. They have also worked to refocus attention on former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton. Trump himself still refers to his opponent in last year’s presidential election as “Crooked Hillary.”
On Monday, Limbaugh and other conservative media outlets built on those themes. They downplayed the immediate impact of the Manafort indictments, insisting that they have nothing to do with Trump or his campaign. They also suggested the probe reflects an unfair attack on a populist president by Washington insiders and media liberals.
Much of Monday’s conservative coverage asserted that Clinton is actually the one who colluded with Russia when she was secretary of state. Fox News star Sean Hannity told his audience that people investigating Trump are all complicit in an Obama administration decision in 2010 that allowed a Russian company to gain a financial interest in part of America’s uranium reserves.