At the RNC, former Covington Catholic High student Nicholas Sandmann attacks the news media

In this Friday, Jan. 18, 2019 image made from video provided by the Survival Media Agency, a teenager wearing a "Make America Great Again" hat, center left, stands in front of an elderly Native American singing and playing a drum in Washington. The Roman Catholic Diocese of Covington in Kentucky is looking into this and other videos that show youths, possibly from the diocese's all-male Covington Catholic High School, mocking Native Americans at a rally in Washington. (Survival Media Agency via AP)
Nicholas Sandmann, a teenager wearing a "Make America Great Again" hat, center left, went viral in a 2019 video as he stared at a Native American activist. (Survival Media Agency )

On the ballot, President Trump is running for reelection against Democratic nominee Joe Biden. But at the Republican National Convention, the GOP is acting as if the mainstream media had joined Biden on the opposing ticket.

At Tuesday night's event, former Covington Catholic High School student Nicholas Sandmann of Kentucky, who has become a conservative symbol of liberal media excess, praised Trump for his antiabortion position and told the convention that the president was voters' best chance for a return to "objective journalism."

"I fought back hard to expose the media for what they did to me, and I won a personal victory," Sandmann said in a video in front of the Lincoln Memorial in Washington, D.C. "While much more must be done, I look forward to the day that the media returns to providing balanced, responsible and accountable news coverage. I know President Trump hopes for that too."

Trump has maintained a contentious relationship with the media, calling factual but unflattering reports "fake news" and labeling reporters "the enemy of the people," to the objection of most press freedom advocates.

Sandmann became a national figure by accident during a school trip to Washington, D.C., for the antiabortion March for Life in 2019, when his group encountered other protesters nearby the Lincoln Memorial.

In social media posts that went viral at the time, and in some media commentary that immediately followed, some liberals criticized Sandmann, then 16, who was wearing a red "Make America Great Again" hat when he encountered Omaha Nation elder Nathan Phillips, who had approached him while singing and playing a drum. Sandmann later said he was not mocking Phillips.

His family and many conservatives felt that Sandmann had been defamed or otherwise treated unfairly by media coverage, which led to them filing lawsuits against news outlets saying that he had been “targeted and bullied" by the media. He reached settlements with CNN and the Washington Post.

"In November, I believe this country must unite around a president who calls the media out and refuses to allow them to create a narrative instead of reporting the facts," Sandmann said. "I believe we must join a president who will challenge the media to return to objective journalism."

On his Twitter account, Sandmann identifies himself as the communications director of the Transylvania University College Republicans.