Sen. Tom Cotton applauded The New York Times on Thursday for running his controversial op-ed that called for “an overwhelming show of force” from federal troops to quell racial unrest in American cities.
The piece, headlined “Send In the Troops,” attracted widespread condemnation after it was published on Wednesday night. Numerous Times journalists publicly criticized the article and said it put “black lives in danger.” The NewsGuild of New York, a journalists’ union, said Cotton’s op-ed encouraged further violence.
“I will commend The New York Times leadership,” Cotton (R-Ark.) told Fox News. “We obviously don’t agree on very much, but in this case, they ran my opinion piece, with which they disagreed, and they’ve stood up to the woke progressive mob in their own newsroom.”
The column highlighted incidents of looting, rioting and shooting in American cities as part of the unrest sweeping the nation following the killing of George Floyd, a 46-year-old black man, while in police custody in Minneapolis. The Republican senator urged President Donald Trump to “support local law enforcement with federal authority” by invoking the Insurrection Act.
Addressing the backlash on Fox News on Thursday morning, Cotton said the reaction to the op-ed revealed what he said was the hypocrisy of progressives that claim to defend liberal values.
“As soon as they are presented with an opinion with which they disagree, they go into meltdown, they demand censorship, they refer to words as violence,” Cotton said.
The Times’ editorial page editor James Bennet defended the decision to publish Cotton’s piece, writing on Twitter that it was the newspaper’s role to show readers opposing viewpoints from elected officials.
“We understand that many readers find Senator Cotton’s argument painful, even dangerous,” Bennet wrote. “We believe that is one reason it requires public scrutiny and debate.”
The NewsGuild of New York said the op-ed lacked context and vetting, while claiming Cotton spread misinformation that “pours gasoline on the fire.”
“Invariably, invoking state violence disproportionately hurts Black and brown people,” the statement said. “It also jeopardizes our journalists’ ability to work in the field safely and effectively.”
Prominent Times journalists tweeted their opposition to the decision to publish the article.
“As a black woman, as a journalist, as an American, I am deeply ashamed that we ran this,” wrote Nikole Hannah-Jones, a New York Times Magazine writer who spearheaded the “1619 Project.”
The op-ed contained arguments that previous Times reporting had flagged as misinformation.
Cotton wrote that “left-wing radicals like antifa” were exploiting the Floyd protests to promote anarchy. But the Times had reported that the claim that antifa activists were the cause of looting and riots was the largest incidence of misinformation surrounding the protests.