Politics / President Trump Trump, McConnell Are Fighting MSNBC, Washington Post Inside the latest Trump vs. the media mess By Newser Editors and Wire Services Posted Jul 30, 2019 5:40 PM CDT Copied In this file photo from Wednesday, June 12, 2019, House Oversight and Reform Committee Chairman Elijah Cummings, D-Md., is shown on Capitol Hill in Washington. (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite, file) A skirmish (or two) involving President Trump, Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, the Washington Post, and MSNBC has escalated into unusual personal bitterness this week, with election security legislation and Trump's attacks on US Rep. Elijah Cummings as the triggers. The AP explains: The McConnell arm of the drama started when the Post's Dana Milbank wrote an opinion column published Friday that criticized McConnell for blocking legislation aimed at protecting the nation's political system against foreign attack. Noting Russia's cyber intrusion on the 2016 presidential election and indications that it would try again next year, Milbank's column was headlined, "Mitch McConnell is a Russian asset." Milbank wrote that he could only conclude that the Republican leader from Kentucky, who is up for re-election next year, believes Russian influence would benefit him and his party. "A leader who won't protect our country from attack is no patriot," he wrote. McConnell denounced the attacks on the floor of the US Senate on Monday, calling it "modern-day McCarthyism" from people who "have worn out the volume knob so badly that they have nothing left but the most unhinged smears." He said the legislation he blocked was partisan in nature. "It doesn't make Republicans traitors or un-American," he said. "It makes us policymakers with a different opinion." Responding to a reporter's question about Milbank's Post column, Trump said the newspaper's leaders "ought to be ashamed of themselves and they ought to apologize." Fred Hiatt, the Post's editorial page editor, said Milbank's column was legitimate commentary. "Of course it's equally legitimate for Mr. McConnell to express a contrary view, but the Milbank argument has nothing to do with McCarthyism," Hiatt said. Trump had defended McConnell while speaking to reporters outside the White House. The Post said it had no comment on what the president said on Tuesday. Joe Scarborough, host of MSNBC's Morning Joe, picked up on the subject, labeling McConnell "Moscow Mitch." Read on for Trump's latest fight with the show's co-hosts, and how Cummings is involved. On Tuesday, Trump went after Morning Joe on Twitter: "Wow! Morning Joe & Psycho ratings have really crashed. Very small audience. People are tired of hearing Fake News delivered with an anger that is not to be believed. Sad, when the show was sane, they helped get me elected. Thanks! Was on all the time. Lost all of its juice!" He later added, "Just reminded my staff that Morning Joe & Psycho were with me in my room, at their request, the night I won New Hampshire. Likewise, followed me to other states ... Don’t watch show, but heard Mika said I asked to preside over their marriage. Not true—does anyone really believe that? They were married by Elijah, King of Baltimore!" The dispute was apparently instigated by the show's defense of Maryland Democratic congressman Elijah Cummings, who was attacked by Trump over the weekend for not doing more to help a Baltimore he said was infested with crime. Scarborough delivered a 10-minute essay Monday on behalf of his "personal friend" Cummings, saying the congressman had more courage and cared more about his constituents than Trump ever will. Scarborough was absent from Tuesday's show, but his co-host and wife, Mika Brzezinski, picked up on the theme. Morning Joe received some criticism for not telling viewers, as part of its Cummings coverage Monday, that the Maryland congressman presided over the 2018 wedding of Scarborough and Brzezinski. She said on Tuesday's show that she had posted pictures of their wedding that included Cummings on social media Sunday, and that regular viewers of Morning Joe were aware of it. "We chose Elijah Cummings to marry us because he really represents everything that we aspire to be in a human being," Brzezinski said. "He really is the man of the moment at this moment in history. Also, for the record, President Trump offered to marry us and we turned down that offer. That wasn't going to happen." As for Trump's claim that the show helped him get elected: Trump was often featured on Morning Joe for interviews in 2015, and Scarborough was among the first major media personalities to take his candidacy seriously. The show has consistently criticized Trump since he's been president. But as for Trump's claim that the show's ratings are falling, the Nielsen company says that the MSNBC show's average audience for the first six months of 2019 has gone up slightly from 1.07 million to 1.11 million. (More President Trump stories.) Report an error