CNN is pushing back on reports that it sidelined its top fact-checker to avoid antagonizing President Donald Trump.
Daniel Dale, a senior reporter at CNN, became a fixture of the network’s political coverage for his rapid-fire, on-air fact checks of the Republican president, often delivering detailed rebuttals on issues ranging from inflation to the 2020 election.
But while the Canadian-born journalist remains active on social media, he has not appeared on television since March and has not delivered a “true fact check segment” since his February critique of Trump’s State of the Union address, Mediate reported.
His absence from the air waves has drawn scrutiny, particularly as Paramount Skydance seeks approval from the Trump administration for its planned $110 billion merger with CNN parent company Warner Bros. Discovery. CNN, however, rejected any connection between Dale’s reduced airtime and the pending deal.
“There is no truth to this,” a network spokesperson told The Independent. “Daniel is a multiplatform reporter whose regular fact checks of the President are an important part of CNN’s political coverage. Like all CNN reporters, his on-air appearances are determined by the news of the day — any suggestion otherwise is false.”
A CNN representative added that Dale continues to produce regular digital and vertical video fact checks, noting that his on-air appearances, as with most reporters, represent only a small share of his overall reporting.
On Wednesday, Status highlighted what it called the “Curious Disappearance of Daniel Dale,” corroborating Mediate’s report that the veteran fact-checker has been absent from CNN’s airwaves.
The outlet noted that Dale relocated to Toronto last year, but added that CNN regularly features guests and contributors from around the globe, suggesting the move should not have limited his on-air presence.
Dale “has continued to publish fact checks for CNN’s online operation and appeared in some short-form digital videos produced by the network,” although “the timing has raised questions,” Status reported, referring to the merger.
Paramount revealed its intention to acquire Warner Bros. Discovery 48 hours after Dale’s State of the Union fact check — which may be “entirely coincidental,” the outlet noted. But Dale’s diminished air time has “raised some eyebrows at a moment when corporate media outlets are under a microscope for bending the knee to Trump as he intensifies his unprecedented assault on the press.”
Paramount’s proposed merger has faced months of scrutiny, with critics accusing the media giant, which owns CBS News, of taking steps to curry favor with the Trump administration.
Some Democratic lawmakers, for example, pointed to the company’s decision to settle a lawsuit involving 60 Minutes — agreeing to pay Trump $16 million — as a potential attempt to smooth the path for FCC approval.
Other critics took issue with a private April dinner hosted by Paramount executives, including CEO David Ellison, with Trump and senior administration officials. Some unnamed CBS News insiders expressed alarm that the gathering could reinforce perceptions of undue closeness between the newsroom and the administration.
The Independent has reached out to Paramount for comment.
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