War: Media Blasts Obama For Stalinist Control, Lack Of Transparency, “Pay To Play” Interviews To Friendly Reporters

January 23rd, 2009 (15) Posted By .

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Politico:

A growing media frustration with Barack Obama spilled into the open at Thursday’s briefing, with reporters accusing the White House of stifling access and giving Obama’s first interview as president to a multi-million dollar inauguration sponsor.

Veteran CBS newsman Bill Plante was one of the most vocal critics, questioning the White House’s handling of Wednesday night’s second swearing in – which was covered by just a four-reporter print pool that didn’t include a news photographer or TV correspondent.

He also asked new press secretary Robert Gibbs why ABC, which paid millions to host the DC Neighborhood Ball, was granted the only inauguration day interview with President Obama – a move he equated to “pay to play.”

“We have a tradition here of covering the president,” said Plante, who is covering his fourth administration.

Gibbs defended the White House’s moves, insisting aides acted in a “way that was upfront and transparent” in allowing the standard pool into the swearing-in. And Obama himself seemed mindful of making a good impression, paying a surprise visit to the White House pressroom a few hours after the briefing.

It’s been a bumpy 24 hours for Gibbs and company, as members of the White House press corps have publicly expressed frustration with an administration promising openness and transparency.

At the same time, some members of the Obama administration’s press team have signaled that they plan to shake up some of the old traditions of White House coverage, some of the longest-standing – and most jealously guarded – in town.

In recent weeks, New York Times editors complained that its White House team hadn’t gotten a sit-down with Obama during the transition, breaking an unofficial tradition whereby recent president-elects have free-wheeling exchanges with the Gray Lady before the inauguration.
In the case of the second swearing-in, however, it seemed to give reporters a chance to lay down an early marker on questioning whether Obama would live up to one of his key campaign pledges, at least when it comes to the media.

“It is ironic, the same day that the president is talking about transparency, we were not let in,” CNN’s Ed Henry said on the air Wednesday night after news of the second swearing-in broke.

Henry’s main gripe was that television reporters weren’t permitted to cover a historic moment, when Obama once again raised his right hand and took the oath before Justice John Roberts. The only images came from White House photographer Pete Souza.

Three wire services — The Associated Press, Reuters and Agence France-Presse – refused to move those images, in protest of the White House’s handling of the event.

The wire services’ photographers were also denied access to photograph Obama sitting in the Oval Office on the first day, and similarly refused to move the White House approved photos.

Michael Oreskes, the AP’s managing editor for U.S. news, told his own news outlet that “we are not distributing what are, in effect, visual press releases.”

Later, in a statement to Politico, Oreskes said that the AP believes “access for news photographers has been a time-honored tradition at the White House through many administrations and needs to be continued.”

“We are working diligently with the White House staff to ensure this access,” he added.

Jennifer Loven, the AP’s White House correspondent and president of the White House Correspondents’ Association, said she and the group’s board “are addressing this aggressively with the White House—our strong objections to both the issue of them releasing photo handouts from events that the press should be able to cover, and the issue of how the pool was structured last night.”

Providing access is probably the easiest ways to appease the White House press corps, which feeds on it. So by not allowing the three wire services in the Oval Office for day one—a ritual that typically yields flattering shots of a new president writing at his desk or chatting with aides—the press team picked a fight that could have been avoided.

But those weren’t the only issues of access to come up in Thursday’s roughly 50-minute briefing.

Before Gibbs took the podium, reporters were given a background briefing under an agreement to only attribute information to “senior administration officials”—a policy some news organizations object to as a matter of policy.

But when Gibbs let slip the name of one briefer, Greg Craig, a couple times, The Wall Street Journal’s Jonathan Weisman asked, “Are we allowed to repeat that name?”

During the earliest days of the Clinton administration, such abrupt changes in the traditional press access were often met with harsh criticism from the briefing room pack, most notably, the blocking off of access to the office of then press secretary George Stephanopoulos.

Former Clinton press secretary Dee Dee Myers, who succeeded Stephanopoulos, said in PBS’s “The Clinton Years” that the move “made the press very angry because they lost access to a part of the building that they had had access to.”

“And it didn’t serve us,” she continued. “And it was stupid and didn’t last very long. I can’t remember when the decision was made and the door was finally reopened but it was a complete waste of energy. It alienated people for no purpose. It served nothing. It served no one. And it was a rookie, rookie mistake.”

Myers said Thursday that the Obama’s decision to bar widespread access to the re-do of the oath wasn’t in the same category as shutting access to the press office, but wouldn’t help in relations with the media.

“I think not letting video, that’s a bit of a rookie mistake,” Myers said, adding that “when you can, it’s better to err on the side of inclusiveness with the press.”

On balance however, she said of Obama’s press team, “I think generally speaking they’re doing very well so far,” said Myers.

There have been a handful of rocky moments so far. Some press staffers found their name cards misspelled on Wednesday and phone lines weren’t properly hooked up. Reporters trying to reach the press staff got emails bounced back.

Also, press aides informed reporters that the doors of the lower press office will be locked until 8:30 am, an inconvenience for those on the early shift. Following a USA Today blog item, there was confusion about whether the Whitehouse.gov site would regularly publish pool reports since there was a “pool report” link on the site. And in the hours before Gibbs’ briefing, the northwest gate of the White House started running out of temporary passes.

Now, given the expected learning curve, most of these wrinkles should be ironed out in time. But on broader issues of access, it remains to be seen if the Obama press team is making rookie mistakes, or simply asserting a new protocol, not bound to past traditions that White House reporters have grown accustomed to. While the press corps balks at changes in access, these rules aren’t written in stone. It may chafe veterans of the briefing room, but it’s the administration’s prerogative on such matters.

Of course, the media landscape has changed significantly over the 16 years, and getting one’s message across through establishment media isn’t the only option for the new administration.

The Obama campaign proved that one could skirt around the mainstream media at times, whether by blasting out text messages to millions of supporters (the Biden pick), or leaking to select news outlets and blogs as a means of getting out the day’s talking points out.

But even if the press team is keeping reporters and photographers at bay, perhaps the President will draw them a bit closer.

After Obama signed an executive order Thursday morning to close the prison at Guantanamo Bay within a year, “press office staffers began to shoo the pool out the door, and the camera lights were dimmed,” wrote Scripps Howard’s Bartholomew Sullivan in a pool report.

However, Obama stopped the reporter from being ushered out, saying, “there are three of these.” The lights came back on.

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  • CGadsden

    Maybe if the would have fucking vetted this piece of shit Commie, Muslim, illegal immigrant, domestic terror associate, cum guzzling queen in the first place then maybe they wouldn’t have this problem. Karma’s a bitch and it’s about to get WAAAAAy bitchier. He’s the Media’s “President”, not mine; reap the whirlwind motherfuckers.

  • TechnicalDeath

    “Why that backstabbing SOB! Why didn’t we know about this earlier?!” — CBS News Correspondent

    Fuck this guy! I think I’ll get dishonorably discharged before I call him a CiC.

  • http://www.freewebs.com/servercompany/KnightsTemplar.jpg Kurt(the infidel) Fatwa accepted

    :arrow: CGadsden

    well put :beer:

    ————————–

    me thinks the honeymoon is over. and at sets a new record for that. he went from their Messiah to their pain in the ass in no time

  • BradW (the Infidel)

    The openness the Obama team had been referring to meant that they would not hide any top secret information that might save American lives, whether civilian or military, but would bar access to information that will lead to stopping attacks from the agencies that need them.

    In other words, the Grey lady and the rest of the world socialist media will get anything regarding tracking and stopping terrorist attacks, secret information that could lead to the capture of our enemies will be open for all to see, so our enemies will see it and be able to remain safe, all part of the so called “more open diplomacy of the US” that they are apewing all over.

    On the other hand, any information gleaned from our enemies regarding their moves, the locations of their leaders, supplies, plans, etc., will not be shared with the FBI, CIA or military, until the worldwide socialist media has time to print it, or spread across the internet, to warn those enemies.

    In other words, stock up on non-perishables, get ready to protect what is yours, the socialists are out to get as many of us killed as possible

  • Moultrie

    The Media Morons are acting like they are in an abusive relationship, let’s see how long these pricks will take it.
    My guess is they will be Goebbeled for a while yet.

  • Steve in NC

    Is Buyer’s Remorse already setting in? A fool and his money(or ideology) is soon parted.

    Good description of Buyer’s Remorse:
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Buyer%27s_remorse

    “Buyer’s remorse, when evidence exists that it is justified, is a classical example of cognitive dissonance. One will either seek to discount the new evidence, or truly regret and try to renounce the purchase.”

  • Rob (CDTFLINT)

    Pretty much got it on cue. The media put him in office so they could rape him in the Oval Office…..so thoughtful of them :lol: What ever happened to their leg tingles?

  • dadeo

    Yeah, what CGadsden said. :lol:

  • CGadsden

    DO NOT TEST THE LORD YOUR GOD! Puh-lease!

  • Roland

    The press has been nothing but the PR arm of the 0′s “organism” and they have a long way to go to get any credit from me. Too many surveys and stories have indicted the media on their cheerleading and they have no credibility, and thus have reduced their effectiveness as a tool. A few tough questions and a little attitude centered around press rather than more central matters might simply be an effort to enhance their credibility and usefulness without causing any substantive damage to the 0.

  • Hardball1911(Revolutionary Constitutionalist)

    Technical Death, the only asshole that would hurt (being dishonorably discharged) is yourself. ;) (You aren’t an asshole, I use that term as a term of endearment.)

    Now we are seeing the propaganda side of things. Useful idiots, whole nine yards…

    Transparent is only… as transparent as the opaque eggshell that Ofuck has built to protect his agenda…

  • XD-40

    Obot just took on Limbaugh. Told the Republicans who they can and can’t listen to. This guy is certifiably insane.

  • Phil Byler

    Obama is at bottom a radical socialist who does not believe in freedom. We will see more of this in the days ahead, and we shoud hammer Obama every time because it just might start to sink in the heads of Americans that Obama is not someone who believes in freedom and that they made a very, very bad mistake in electing him President.

  • Proud2beanInfidel

    What did you expect from our new socialist dictator? You ain’t seen nothin’ yet. No pun intended. It will only go downhill from here.

    I can’t wait for his own “party” to turn on him.
    :beer: :beer: :beer: :beer: :beer: :beer: :beer: :razz:

  • Jim C.

    The media’s finally beginning to realize they’ve been bamboozled and used and now they’re being put in their place.

    Proud2beanInfidel wrote, “I can’t wait for his own ‘party’ to turn on him.”

    Let’s hope that happens before Dr. Changegov establishes his civilian national “security” force.