Presidential debate moderator Steve Scully suspended by C-SPAN for concocting Twitter ‘hack’ claim

15 Oct, 2020 21:09 / Updated 4 years ago

C-SPAN has suspended political editor and debate moderator Steve Scully after he admitted lying about his Twitter feed being hacked when caught out apparently scheming against President Donald Trump and trying to cover his tracks.

Scully was indefinitely suspended on Thursday, after admitting that he hadn’t been hacked after all. He constructed the hacking story a week ago, after tweeting “should I respond to Trump” at former White House Communications Director Anthony Scaramucci, now a committed anti-Trumper.

The tweet – evidently intended to be a private message – was sent after the president called the C-SPAN editor a “never Trumper,” on account of his past work in Joe Biden’s Senate office. Scully himself immediately claimed to have been tricked by hackers.

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However, in a statement released on Thursday, Scully admitted that he had “falsely claimed that my Twitter account was hacked,” and apologized for his “errors in judgment.”

When the story first surfaced last week, C-SPAN initially went to the mat for Scully, an employee of the network for 30 years. The outlet said that Scully “did not originate the tweet,” and the Commission on Presidential Debates supported the hacking story.

Other journalists and Scaramucci also had defended Scully. CNN's Joe Lockhart went so far as to tweet that anyone who questions Scully "is a damn liar."

Many conservatives weren’t fooled, though. Trump accused Scully of “pulling the old ‘I’ve been hacked’ line,” while pundit Mike Cernovich said that Scully was “betting his reputation on a cover-up working.”

Trump was quick to tweet after news broke of Scully admitting concocting the hacking claim and his suspension. “I was right again,” he jeered. “The Debate was Rigged!...Did I show good instincts in being the first to know?”

Scully was slated to host the second presidential debate between Trump and Joe Biden on Thursday evening. However, Trump pulled out when the Commission on Presidential Debates announced last week that the debate would be a virtual one. “I’m not going to waste my time on a virtual debate,” he said “That’s not what debating is all about.”

In lieu of an in-person showdown, both Trump and Biden are hosting competing town hall events on NBC and ABC respectively on Thursday night.

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