Terry Moran defends ‘fair and accurate’ post about Trump that got him dropped by ABC News

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"Terry Moran Discusses Dismissal from ABC News After Controversial Trump Critique"

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Terry Moran, the former ABC News correspondent, recently spoke out about his dismissal from the network following a controversial social media post criticizing President Donald Trump and his deputy chief of staff, Stephen Miller. In interviews with The New York Times and The Bulwark, Moran expressed that he has no regrets about his post, which he described as a truthful reflection of his beliefs. He labeled Miller as a 'world-class hater' and suggested that Trump's hatred serves his own glorification. The post, which drew backlash from both colleagues and officials in the White House, led to Moran's suspension from ABC News, followed by the network's decision not to renew his contract. Moran indicated that he felt his termination was a business decision and claimed that ABC had backed out of an oral agreement to extend his contract for three more years.

Throughout his long career at ABC News, where he has held various prominent roles since 1997, Moran has typically refrained from sharing personal opinions publicly. However, he defended his right to express his views, arguing that being fair and accurate is more important than striving for objectivity in journalism. In light of his departure from ABC, Moran has launched a Substack newsletter, quickly amassing over 90,000 subscribers. This move reflects a broader trend among journalists seeking independence from traditional media outlets. He conveyed a sense of freedom in his new role, emphasizing that he and other independent journalists can now speak their minds without the constraints of network affiliations.

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Terry Moran has no regrets.

The now-former ABC News correspondent sat down for a pair of interviews on Monday, speaking out for the first time aboutlosing his job at the networkafter he posted a social media missive last week against President Donald Trump and deputy chief of staff Stephen Miller.

“I don’t think you should ever regret telling the truth. And I don’t,” Morantold The New York Times. He echoed that sentiment during a live-streamed interview withThe Bulwark’s Tim Miller. “I wrote it because I thought it was true,” Moran said.

Moran, who interviewed Trump in the Oval Office in late April, wrote in the now-deleted X post that Miller, a “world-class hater,” is “richly endowed with the capacity for hatred” and that “hatreds are his spiritual nourishment.”

For Trump, he added, hatred is “only a means to an end, and that end is his own glorification. That’s his spiritual nourishment.”

The post shocked Moran’s own ABC News colleagues and drew public outrage from White House officials, including Miller, Vice President JD Vance and White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt. The networkinitially suspended Moranand, two days later, announced it would not renew his contract.

Moran, 65, a long-time news correspondent for ABC who has never been one to publicly share his opinions, styled himself as a “proud centrist” in his interview with The Bulwark. Since first joining the network in 1997, Moran has served as chief foreign correspondent, chief White House correspondent, “Nightline” co-anchor and, most recently, senior national correspondent.

“It wasn’t a drunk tweet,” Moran told the Times on Monday about his late-night posting on X. “I used very strong language deliberately,” he told The Bulwark, admitting the post was “very hot” but nevertheless “accurate and true.”

The offending post, he said, “was something that was in my heart and mind.”

Regarding his ABC ouster, Moran told the Bulwark, “From my perspective, it looked like a business decision. I became bad business, it feels like.”

In his Times interview, Moran pushed back against the ABC News framing that he was let go ahead of his contract’s expiration, instead alleging the outlet was “bailing” on an “oral agreement” to renew his contract for three years. “We had a deal,” he said.

ABC News did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Moran also resisted the notion that journalists should strive to be objective. He told The Bulwark that “there is no Mount Olympus of objectivity where a mandarin class of wise people have no feelings about their society.”

“What you have to be is fair and accurate,” Moran said. “I would refer to the interview with the president that I did, or a lot of my work.”

Shortly after being dropped by ABC News, Moran launcheda Substack newsletter, joining the growing ranks of TV news stars going independent with their reporting and analysis. The Times reported that Moran has thus far drawn more than 90,000 subscribers on the platform.

Moran seemed assured in his move, telling the Bulwark, a fellow Substack-hosted publication, “We are free to speak our minds here.”

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Source: CNN