Fresh from his confrontation with Donald Trump on Tuesday night, activist reporter Jorge Ramos appeared on ABC and CBS to pitch the idea that it's the job of journalists to openly oppose the candidate's positions. On Good Morning America, Wednesday, he asked colleague George Stephanopoulos, "We have to denounce that he wants to deny citizenship to children being born here."

He added, "They're citizens, just like [Trump's children], and it is impossible to build a 1900-mile wall... So that's the kind of questions that I was asking Mr. Trump." Of course, those were statements and not questions. Lobbying for more subjectivity in the press, Ramos declared, "...I think the best journalism happens when you take a stand... We are not only required, but we are forced to take a stand."

To his credit, Stephanopoulos actually challenged this and reminded:

GEORGE STEPHANOPOULOS: You pressed him hard with those questions. You have also had tough things to say about Mr. Trump. On CNN you said he was the loudest voice of intolerance, division and hatred right now in America. So, how do you respond to some of your critics like Sean Spicer, the chief strategist of the RNC, who says you're more advocate than journalist?

Over on CBS This Morning, Ramos again proved he is much more interested in pushing an agenda and opinion. Taunting Trump, the reporter insisted that the candidate can't win:

JORGE RAMOS: Nationwide he doesn't have the Latino vote and without the Latino vote, he cannot make it to the White House and he's realizing that. You know, let's talk in a year from now, let's see first if he becomes the nominee and if he becomes the nominee he's going to be pleading for the Latino vote because without the Latino vote, without 60 million that will go to the polls in 2016 he can't make it to the White House, and he knows it.

Regarding Ramos's ejection from the press conference, co-host Norah O'Donnell wondered, "So, were you there to pick a fight?"

Ramos has a long history of pushing agenda-driven journalism – and not just on the issue of immigration. On the December 10, 2014 edition of GMA, he asked Barack Obama if George W. Bush "betrayed American values."

On NBC's Today, Peter Alexander hailed Ramos as the "Walter Cronkite of Latino journalism." On Tuesday night, ABC's Nightline jumped on the Ramos bandwagon.

A transcript of the August 26 GMA segment is below: