A panel upheld a judgement for CNN.
A panel of appeals court judges on Nov. 18 upheld a ruling against President Donald Trump in a case he brought against CNN.
Trump did not adequately show that CNN defamed him when it reported that he promoted what it described as the โBig Lieโ when challenging results from the 2020 presidential election, judges on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit concluded.
Trump said that the phrase was intended to link him to Adolf Hitler and propaganda used by the Nazis in Germany, but the term is ambiguous enough to cast doubt on that allegation, according to the new ruling.
โSecond, Trumpโs argument hinges on the fact that his own interpretation of his conductโi.e., that he was exercising a constitutional right to identify his concerns with the integrity of electionsโis true and that CNNโs interpretationโi.e., that Trump was peddling his โBig Lieโโis false. However, his conduct is susceptible to multiple subjective interpretations, including CNNโs,โ the per curiam opinion from Circuit Judges Elizabeth L. Branch, Adalberto Jordan, and Kevin Newsom said.
The same court held in a different case that one personโs subjective assessment is not rendered false by another personโs different conclusion.
โTrump has not adequately alleged the falsity of CNNโs statements. Therefore, he has failed to state a defamation claim,โ the court stated.
The White House declined to comment, referring an inquiry to a lawyer representing Trump. That lawyer did not return a request for comment by publication time.
A spokesperson for CNN told The Epoch Times in an email: โWe are declining to comment on the ruling.โ
U.S. District Judge Anuraag Singhal in 2023 had dismissed the lawsuit, finding CNNโs usage of the โBig Lieโ term was repugnant but not defamatory.
Trump had also argued that the district judge should have analyzed more than the five statements he outlined in his complaint, but those statements included CNNโs usage of the Nazi-linked term, the panel said.
The panel also rejected Trumpโs attempts to allow him to file an amended complaint or move for reconsideration from Singhal of the decision. The district court acted within its discretion when dealing with motions to amend and reconsider, according to the appeals court.







