Others say

Watch deeds, not words

Everyone stands when the president enters the room. It's protocol, a deserved sign of respect for the office and the American people who select its occupant.

Donald J. Trump, who stood at the West Front of the Capitol on Friday and swore an oath, deserves every ounce of that respect--for as long as he is in office.

He won't be everybody's friend or hero, but he is now everybody's president. Plenty of people have reason to doubt and distrust. Dozens of members of Congress planned to boycott the inauguration after Trump disparaged civil rights legend and Georgia Congressman John Lewis. Hundreds of thousands of women planned a march in Washington on Saturday--while perhaps as many more show solidarity in similar marches in cities across the United States.

Others still disagree with, even dispute, the results of November's election. But the election is over.

Trump's a businessman and a showman. All we've had to judge him by are his business (he's done very well for himself) and his words--which, like those of any showman, are crafted to draw attention.

Having taken the oath, his deeds from this point forward push everything else to the background. What he says still counts, but what he does or fails to do counts even more.

No one should take that to heart more than the nation's news media.

Trump has been openly hostile to the press for many months. He has clashed head to head with reporters from some of the nation's largest news organizations.

Trump doesn't need the news media to transmit his words to the public, long a traditional role of the press. He has Twitter and other social media for that.

Far more important is the news media's role in reporting the accomplishments, mistakes, deeds and misdeeds behind those words.

Trump may label unfavorable stories as fake news, but the people of America can judge by his deeds whether they will still respect him four years from now.

Editorial on 01/21/2017

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