Neutrality for the sake of neutrality doesn't really serve us in the age of Trump.
Jim Acosta
Well I think we can't avoid covering the news and when the president says something like that you're the enemy of the people, I think I'm well within my right to stand up and say this is well within my lane as a journalist and as an American to say that that's not appropriate.
The president is supposed to stand up for the First Amendment and stand up for the free press - not put us through the meat grinder.
Yes, Barack Obama had his clashes with the press. I witnessed those first-hand covering the second term of his administration. But we did not have Barack Obama on almost a weekly basis referring to the press as the enemy of the people and accusing reporters of treason and calling legitimate stories fake news.
We have to speak truth to power.
We go through periods of turmoil in our nation's history, and one of the remarkable things about the United States is that we seem to keep making our way through those periods.
Google my name and 'Barack Obama.' There were many days I was tough on him. People have short-term memories. They think we're only being tough on Trump. That's just not true.
We can't have Trump supporters only trust what comes out of conservative news media and vice versa.
I was raised in this business not to make myself part of the story. I have never wanted to be part of the story.
I receive more threats than I could count; it's almost every week.
I wish at times that the press had been a bit more in solidarity with one another.
We have seen presidents from both parties express their frustrations with the press. That's absolutely normal.
I have never witnessed a concerted effort by any news organization to take a stand one way or the other on a political issue, to damage one particular party or help another.
As reporters, we not only deliver the news of the day. We must also defend the truth. And just because we are pro-truth doesn't mean we are anti-Trump.
I think aggressive, sometimes outspoken reporting from the White House briefing room is expected by the American people.
The vast majority of Trump supporters are wonderful people and I have very nice interactions with them.
Yes, I've received death threats.
My job is to ask tough questions.
It kind of goes without saying. But I will: If you are a Nazi, you aren't a fine person. You're bad.
We have to stand for the truth.
Members of the press have been so savaged by Trump and his propagandists in the media that journalists seem almost foreign or anti-American to his supporters.
I want my kids to grow up in a country where, you know, we can still shout questions at the president.
I think we have reached the point where we can state definitively, that Nazis are bad people.
An adversarial relationship between the president and members of the press can be expected.
I don't believe that there are two sides to a story when it's a matter of right versus wrong. It just doesn't work that way.
I don't believe reporters are supposed to be the story. That's how I was trained.
Trump is a branding expert. He is a marketing genius to some extent.
We should not have the president of the United States referring to segments of American society as the enemy of the people.
I don't want my kids to grow up in a country where the press is called the enemy of the people.
My parents were blue-collar.