Top Media Organizations, Blocked From Media Briefing in White House
White House
Press Secretary Sean Spicer on Friday hand selected news outlets to participate
in an off-camera gaggle
with reporters inside his West Wing office instead of the James S Brady Press Briefing Room.
with reporters inside his West Wing office instead of the James S Brady Press Briefing Room.
The news
outlets blocked from the press briefing include organizations that President
Trump has criticized by name. CNN, BBC, The New York Times, LA Times, New York
Daily News, BuzzFeed, The Hill, and the Daily Mail, were among the news outlets
barred from the gathering.
Instead, the
press secretary hand-picked news outlets including Breitbart News, One America
News Network, The Washington Times, all news organisations with far-right
leanings. Others major outlets approved included ABC, CBS, NBC, Fox News,
Reuters and Bloomberg.
“Nothing
like this has ever happened at the White House in our long history of covering
multiple administrations of different parties,” Dean Baquet, executive editor
of The New York Times, said in a statement.
“We strongly
protest the exclusion of The New York Times and the other news organizations.
Free media access to a transparent government is obviously of crucial national
interest.”
BuzzFeed’s
editor-in-chief, Ben Smith, also responded to his outlet being barred from the
briefing: “While we strongly object to the White House’s apparent attempt to
punish news outlets whose coverage it does not like, we won’t let these latest
antics distract us from the work of continuing to cover this administration
fairly and aggressively.”
And the
BBC's Washington bureau chief, Paul Danahar, said: “We understand there may be
occasions when, due to space or circumstances, the White House restricts press
events to the established pool.
“However,
what happened today did not fit into that pattern. On this occasion selected
media were allowed to attend the briefing and the selected media, including the
BBC, were not.
"The
BBC has a representative at every daily White House briefing so we are not
clear why we were barred from today's. We have sought clarification from the
White House Press team. Out reporting will remain fair and impartial
regardless.”
Several
media outlets including the Associated Press and Time magazine declined to
attend the briefing to boycott the President's decision.
A Wall
Street Journal reporter attended the meeting without being aware of the
circumstances. The publication later promised to boycott similar press
briefings.
"The
Wall Street Journal strongly objects to the White House's decision to bar
certain media outlets from today's gaggle,” a spokesperson with the newspaper
said in a statement. “Had we known at the time, we would not have participated
and we will not participate in such rest
President
Trump renewed his attacks on the media by again calling news outlets “the enemy
of the people” at the Conservative Political Action Conference in Washington
DC. "I'm against the people that make up stories and make up
sources," he told his audience. "They shouldn't be allowed to use
sources unless they use somebody's name. Let their name be put out there."
His comments
come on the heel of reports that President Trump’s Chief of Staff Reince
Priebus privately asked the FBI to prevent news stories of the Trump campaign’s
communication with Russian intelligence.
Jeff Mason,
the president of the White House Correspondents’ Association, said his
organisation will protest strongly against the ban.
"The
WHCA board is protesting strongly against how today's gaggle is being handled
by the White House," he said in a statement. "We encourage the
organizations that were allowed in to share the material with others in the
press corps who were not. The board will be discussing this further with White
House staff."
Joel Simon,
executive director of the Committee to Protect Journalists, also called the
decision alarming.
“President
Trump’s calls for an end to anonymous sources was alarming. It is not the job
of political leaders to determine how journalists should conduct their work,
and sets a terrible example for the rest of the world, where sources often must
remain anonymous to preserve their own lives,” he said in a statement.
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