Some worry that White House briefings are a broken tradition


PTI | Newyork | Updated: 25-07-2020 20:20 IST | Created: 25-07-2020 20:20 IST
Some worry that White House briefings are a broken tradition

A few times each week, reporters sit in the White House briefing room to fire questions at the Trump administration's press secretary as she stands at a podium to respond. That visual, however, may be the only part of a time-honoured government tradition that is familiar.

Under Kayleigh McEnany, the White House press briefing has become a streamlined, full-throated advertisement for a president facing re-election, a venue for attacks on the media and a forum relatively light on information about what government is doing. ABC News' Jonathan Karl, whose term as White House Correspondents' Association president just ended, wrote in The Washington Post this month that he believed it is the White House press secretary's duty to hold briefings regularly, "but not like this." While McEnany sets the tone, it's naive to suggest she bears sole responsibility for what's become of an event that, for many Americans, is the primary window into what an administration is doing.

McEnany, President Donald Trump's fourth press secretary, restored the briefing after it was dormant for more than a year. She was appointed press secretary April 7 and gave her first briefing on May 1. In many ways, she's the best Trump has had for the job. She's quick on her feet, smooth with answers and comfortable in front of cameras. The Harvard law school graduate has worked as an on-air commentator for CNN and a spokesperson for the Republican National Committee.

Her briefings start with an opening statement that usually has more to do with politics than government. On July 6, she reviewed the president's "two defining, unifying and patriotic speeches" over the holiday weekend. Five days earlier she declared Seattle "liberated" from the "radical left." "Democrats continue to put politics before peace while the president tries to restore law and order," she said Monday.

The questions and answers with reporters — by their nature a combative exercise — allow McEnany to parry, fight back or deflect if it suits her purpose. Exasperated by questions about the president's position on displaying the Confederate flag, prompted by a Trump tweet on NASCAR shortly before the July 6 briefing, McEnany said, "I'm not going to answer a question a sixth time." "You've been asked," a reporter responded. "But you haven't answered." She keeps a briefing book handy to refer to past statements and stories. So, for example, when she was asked about Maryland Gov. Larry Hogan's criticism that states have been left to fend for themselves with the virus, she read quotes from March and April where the Republican governor had complimented Trump.

Following a reporter's question about the appropriateness of Trump giving a largely political speech from the Rose Garden, McEnany responded with first a deflection, then an attack. The reporter said legality wasn't the point of the question when McEnany noted that the president was exempt from a law that restricts politicking on the job.

"Your real problem was ... the fact that the president gave a very good, very powerful speech from the Rose Garden," McEnany retorted. With a boss who routinely attacks the press, McEnany has no problems doing the same. She went after The New York Times twice in recent weeks, for reports on the coronavirus and on intelligence assessments that Russia paid bounties for killing American soldiers in Afghanistan.

The briefings are kept short, generally a half hour, and McEnany ends with a closing statement. This past week she reported that Ivanka Trump had distributed food boxes in Washington. Often she tugs at hearts: by citing an interview of a father whose 8-year-old daughter was shot, or reading the words of a girl whose father, a police officer, was killed. "We'll be praying for you, Savannah," she said before walking away from the July 13 briefing.

With a president whose words compel so much attention, the briefings are often light on news about administration policy. That's not purely McEnany's doing. Reporters are often focused on Trump's latest tweet or quote. The bulk of the July 6 session was dominated by questions about the NASCAR tweet.(AP) RUP RUP.

(This story has not been edited by Devdiscourse staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

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