The people elected him. The people gave him and his people full control of the government. That's a fact.
They were warned. The media reported what he planed to do. There were no secrets. All out in the open. They still voted for him.
The media can only do so much. The government licenses radio & TV. So the media is on a leash.
Under the U.S. current system with its electoral college, the current U.S. president did lawfully win the election. Furthermore, in terms of the popular vote, he received more votes than his closest competitor and that is also true. However, in terms of percentages, the current U.S. president did *not* receive a majority of the popular vote. He received 49.8% of the vote versus his closest competitor's 48.2%. The remainder of the popular vote went to third-party candidates and write-ins. The result is that while the current U.S. President is lawfully the U.S. President, he did not receive a majority of the popular vote and therefore, at least morally, he could not claim that he received a popular mandate for his programs.
I've posted too many times about comparing the international stories about changes in government, overthrows and the like in Ecuador when I was there and had a news-talk station. A bunch of us, including regional correspondents for journals like Newsweek and for agencies like Reuters, would compare the way the rest of the world heard about us.
Each journalist reported on the "facts" they considered important. Some ignored things that were of consequence. Nearly none of the international services actually told what had really happened.
Facts are, often, a figment of perception.
After reading your reply, I decided to look up the definition of the word "fact" on the web. Below is a link to what I found taken from the Merrian-Webster dictionary:
something that actually exists or occurs : an actual event, situation, etc. —often used in the phrase the fact that; information or a piece of information presented as true or accurate; the quality of being actual : actuality… See the full definition
www.merriam-webster.com
How are journalists supposed to go about finding facts? Probably the best way is for written documentation, preferrably from more than one source and preferrably documents that were prepared independently from each other. The second best way is through interviews with individuals. Here, the goal is to get more than one person operating independently of each other to corroborate information.
What I am attempting to point out is that the current U.S. President, more than any other U.S. President in history, is trying with this "60 Minutes" interview and other means to dictate what the facts are. Even if you accept the idea that Dan Rather didn't have the right to "sass" President Nixon during the interview with the latter, it is quite appalling to observe the great lengths the current U.S. President is taking to insure that mass audiences will not see factual information that contradicts his own statements. He has, for example, using his own money and power, allowed CBS, the television network on which he was interviewed, to be purchased by an ally with that ally promising no less than the removal of those journalists who dare to question the President's suppositions. Not even Richard Nixon, the person with the closest personality and philosophy to the current U.S. President, attempted to do *that!* And I can think of few more dangerous assaults on the current U.S. government that are more effective than forcing the media to repeat, without criticism or fact-checking, the suppositions of the current U.S. leader, regardless of how many votes, both popular and electoral, he received to get in to the office.