London Libel Lawsuits Punish Truth Tellers
AS A PRESIDENTIAL candidate in 2016, Donald Trump famously promised to “open up those libel laws” so that aggrieved public figures like him could sue irksome critics and “win money instead of having no chance.” After Trump took office, he downgraded his vow to a suggestion, possibly because someone informed him that presidents have no power to change the state laws and judicial precedents that govern defamation claims. It might be time, he tweeted, to “change libel laws” in light of his perception that journalists had “gotten me wrong.”
We can get some idea of what Trump had in mind from his long and astonishingly petty history of suing or threatening to sue writers who portray him in an unflattering light. In 2006, for instance, he demanded $5 billion from Timothy L. O’Brien, a financial journalist who had dared to suggest, in his 2005 book TrumpNation: The Art of Being the Donald, that the thin-skinned developer was not worth as much as he claimed. In 2018, Trump’s attorney sent a cease-and-desist letter to Michael Wolff, threatening legal action if the author insisted on publishing Fire and, an exposé about Trump’s inner circle.
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