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Trump White House seeks tighter grip on message with new limits on press

  

Category:  News & Politics

Via:  hallux  •  4 hours ago  •  35 comments

By:   David Folkenflik - NPR

Trump White House seeks tighter grip on message with new limits on press

S E E D E D   C O N T E N T


In the White House briefing room Tuesday, the Trump administration announced its latest steps to tighten its grip on the message it sends out and the news coverage it receives.

No longer would the White House Correspondents' Association, made up of news outlets that cover the White House, determine how they will share coverage of President Trump at major events where space is limited.

Press secretary Karoline Leavitt told the assembled reporters the White House would make that determination instead. Leavitt said the media association previously had "dictated" who was able to report directly on Trump and with this move, she was returning "power to the people."

"Legacy outlets who have participated in the press pool for decades will still be allowed to join – fear not," Leavitt said from the White House lectern. "We will also be offering the privilege to well-deserving outlets who have never been allowed to share in this awesome responsibility." The television pool will not be affected, despite the president's differences with many major networks; before entering electoral politics, Trump was a frequent subject of tabloid and television attention and then a reality TV star.

Press outlets "pool" their resources when coverage by all would be impractical; a selection of print, video, radio, online and photo news organizations alternate in doing the reporting. The Trump administration already has barred The Associated Press, a mainstay of those pools, from covering major events because it has not changed its guidance for calling the body of water between Mexico and Florida the Gulf of America, rather than the Gulf of Mexico.

"In free countries, like the United States is, leaders don't get to pick who covers them day in and day out," Politico reporter Eugene Daniels, the head of the White House Correspondents Association, told NPR's Ari Shapiro Tuesday evening on   All Things Considered. 

Leavitt already has invited once-fringe figures from far-right outlets into the press room to ask questions. They include reporters for the conspiracy-minded Gateway Pundit, Steve Bannon's podcast and Lindell TV, started by the   MyPillow magnate Mike Lindell . While ideological journalists have attended White House briefings for decades, she has amplified their role.

"It's surreal to watch these so-called new media people asking softball, ludicrous questions to Trump and Leavitt," another White House reporter said, speaking on condition of anonymity for fear of repercussions from a boss or the administration. "I never thought I'd see plants in press briefings of the highest seat of American power."

Declaring "VICTORY"


The AP filed a lawsuit over the ban, saying the White House violated its First Amendment free speech rights and its Fifth Amendment procedural rights, as it had no opportunity to appeal the decision internally. At a hearing on Monday, U.S. District Court Judge Trevor McFadden, a Trump appointee, pushed Justice Department lawyers to reconsider the administration's stance toward the AP. Yet the judge also questioned why the cor

respondents' association had such discretion over who participated.

The White House appears to have either taken inspiration or refuge from the judge's words - with Leavitt's buoyant announcement the very next day. She was flanked by television screens showing a map of the Southeastern U.S., each stamped with the word "VICTORY" in all capital letters. It showed the Gulf of Mexico marked as the Gulf of America, Trump's preferred term.

The AP's refusal to change its Stylebook to reflect the president's preference, expressed in an executive order on his first day in office, led to the ban, Trump and Leavitt have said. Judge McFadden suggested that sounded like viewpoint discrimination, something the courts have found violates the First Amendment. Yet he   declined the news agency's request   for an emergency decree to force the administration to back off the ban. Instead, he set a hearing for March 20.

Meanwhile, the president's chief regulator of broadcast media has instigated investigations of each of the major broadcast outlets – ABC, CBS, NBC, NPR and PBS – save Rupert Murdoch's Fox, which is a corporate sister of the pro-Trump Fox News Channel. In 2016, Murdoch struck an alliance of convenience with Trump. It briefly flagged, until last year when Trump once more dominated the Republican primaries.

The president, in his private capacity, has filed many lawsuits against media and social media companies. The owners of ABC, Facebook, and X have each paid millions of dollars to settle lawsuits he filed against them. Paramount, CBS's corporate parent, which is seeking government approval of a sale, is weighing whether to follow their example in Trump's $20 billion suit over its interview with Kamala Harris last year. Legal observers almost uniformly say the president has no merit to his case.

A pincer movement


The administration is operating something of a pincer movement, applying pressure to all possible vulnerabilities.

"Having served as a Moscow correspondent in the early days of Putin's reign, this reminds me of how the Kremlin took over its own press pool and made sure that only compliant journalists were given access," Peter Baker, the chief White House correspondent for the   New York Times , tweeted Tuesday afternoon.

"The message is clear," Baker continued. "Given that the White House has already kicked one news organization out of the pool because of coverage it does not like, it is making certain everyone else knows that the rest of us can be barred too if the president does not like our questions or stories."

Other veteran reporters also reacted with alarm.

"This move does not give the power back to the people - it gives power to the White House," Jacqui Heinrich, who covers Trump for Fox News, tweeted after Leavitt announced the White House would pick which reporters could serve in press pools. "Our job is to advocate for the MOST access possible."

The pressure on the press dovetails with Trump's efforts to clamp down on independent checks on his power within the executive branch. Among the myriad government officials he has dismissed are agency inspectors general and Special Counsel Hampton Dellinger, who   investigates federal employees' complaints against the government . He's fired senior military lawyers, whom Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth – a former Fox star – said could be "roadblocks" to the White House's agenda.

Under Hegseth, the Defense Department has dislodged eight news organizations from permanent work stations at the Pentagon, including NPR, and invited in seven conservative and right-wing news outlets to replace them (along with one liberal outfit, HuffPost).

A Reuters defense correspondent tweeted that Hegseth was traveling to visit Guantanamo Bay to visit the new U.S.-run detention center for immigrants without a single reporter who routinely covers the military. Pentagon social media accounts painstakingly documented his comings and goings. The "DOD rapid response" social media account taunted CNN after it departed its small work space and   mocked the news media last night:   "Since real journalism is dead, we'll do it for you."

Trump's picks visit Voice of America


Some journalists who cover the administration say they believe that veers into propaganda. And that's what is feared by many journalists over at the government-owned Voice of America, who were pressured intensely during Trump's first term. His choice to lead it, Kari Lake, appeared for the first time at the international network yesterday, according to five people there. That said, it was hardly a secret: She   tweeted out a picture of the network's nameplate at the entry of its Washington, D.C. headquarters . "Let's Get To Work," she wrote.

Lake is a former local news anchor in Phoenix who ran, unsuccessfully, for governor and then U.S. Senate from Arizona. She has denied election losses (both hers and Trump's) and become a frequent critic of the mainstream media.

Voice of America (VOA), which is   funded by Congress , operates in nearly 50 languages and reaches an estimated 354 million people weekly across the globe. It is a form of soft power in that it delivers news to places where the press cannot operate freely or is not financially robust, and it models how a free press operates, incorporating criticism as well as praise for each U.S. administration.

Trump   announced Lake's selection   as though the position involves a presidential appointment. It does not; the appointment is done by the head of VOA's parent agency, the U.S. Agency for Global Media, and approved by a bipartisan board.   Confirmation hearings have not yet been scheduled for Trump's pick to lead the USAGM, the   right-wing media critic Brent Bozell .

At the time of her selection, Lake wrote, "Under my leadership, the VOA will excel in its mission: chronicling America's achievements worldwide." That's not precisely the network's stated mission. On its website, Voice of America says it's committed to "providing comprehensive coverage of the news and telling audiences the truth."

As she awaits her appointment at Voice of America, Lake has taken a role as an adviser to the U.S. Agency for Global Media. In recent days, she has defended the Voice of America's existence from calls for its elimination by presidential adviser Elon Musk. She took to Musk's social media platform X to do so.

"I think it's worth getting in, digging around, fixing what's wrong, bolstering what's good, & putting out an incredible product that fulfills its mission, broadcasting the American story across the globe, & spreading the ideals of freedom & liberty," she wrote, linking an interview she sat for with the pro-Trump outlet   Epoch Times .

Another new adviser to VOA's parent agency is Mora Namdar, who   worked for USAGM in the first Trump administration . She also wrote the section on the agency for Project 2025, the blueprint for governing developed by the Heritage Foundation. Trump disavowed Project 2025 on the campaign trail, but now in office, he has   enacted several of its proposals .

In her section on the agency, Namdar wrote that Voice of America and other U.S. owned international outlets often "parrot America's adversaries' propaganda and talking points."

She was part of an effort by Trump appointee Michael Pack, USAGM's chief executive for seven months in 2020, to root out perceived ideological bias throughout the network. A federal judge found that Pack violated constitutional protections. A formal investigation determined that Pack had repeatedly abused the powers of his office, broke laws and regulations, and engaged in gross mismanagement.

Ultimately, interviews with more than two dozen people showed that Trump's aides at the White House and USAGM wanted the network to reflect Trump's successes and to tamp down on criticisms of him - a consistent thread of recent developments.


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jrDiscussion - desc
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Hallux
Professor Principal
1  seeder  Hallux    4 hours ago

But ... but ... but we are told Trump has answered over 1,000 questions ... are you not all agog @!@?

 
 
 
Vic Eldred
Professor Principal
2  Vic Eldred    4 hours ago

"Now, I've been given a list of ten people that I'm supposed to call on and you're all supposed to ask me one question, but I'm sure you'll ask me more. So let me start off with the list I've been given," Biden told reporters.

Biden ‘given a list’ of reporters in post-midterm press conference: ‘People that I'm supposed to call on’ | Fox News

I guess Biden set a precedent.

 
 
 
Sean Treacy
Professor Principal
2.1  Sean Treacy  replied to  Vic Eldred @2    4 hours ago

256

 
 
 
Vic Eldred
Professor Principal
2.1.1  Vic Eldred  replied to  Sean Treacy @2.1    4 hours ago

How soon they forget.

 
 
 
Hallux
Professor Principal
2.2  seeder  Hallux  replied to  Vic Eldred @2    4 hours ago
I guess Biden set a precedent.

And republicans now slavishly adopt what they once derided.

 
 
 
Vic Eldred
Professor Principal
2.2.1  Vic Eldred  replied to  Hallux @2.2    4 hours ago

Oh yes, Republicans must live up to St Theresa standards.

 
 
 
Hallux
Professor Principal
2.2.2  seeder  Hallux  replied to  Vic Eldred @2.2.1    3 hours ago
Republicans

News to me that sycophants have standards.

 
 
 
Sparty On
Professor Expert
2.2.3  Sparty On  replied to  Hallux @2.2.2    3 hours ago

As they say, it takes one to know one.

 
 
 
Hallux
Professor Principal
2.2.4  seeder  Hallux  replied to  Sparty On @2.2.3    3 hours ago

Having never described any politician as "amazing" I would not know.

 
 
 
Ozzwald
Professor Quiet
2.2.5  Ozzwald  replied to  Hallux @2.2    3 hours ago
And republicans now slavishly adopt what they once derided.

But it is okay if Trump or a republican does it.  Only bad if a democrat does it.

 
 
 
Sparty On
Professor Expert
2.2.6  Sparty On  replied to  Hallux @2.2.4    3 hours ago

Aw c’mon now …. give yourself some credit …..

 
 
 
Hallux
Professor Principal
2.2.7  seeder  Hallux  replied to  Sparty On @2.2.6    3 hours ago
give yourself some credit …

I'll leave that to those who upvote their own seeds.

 
 
 
Jeremy Retired in NC
Professor Expert
2.2.8  Jeremy Retired in NC  replied to  Hallux @2.2    3 hours ago

Don't start crying because he might be following Biden's example.  

 
 
 
Sparty On
Professor Expert
2.2.9  Sparty On  replied to  Hallux @2.2.7    3 hours ago

Again, don’t sell yourself short.

 
 
 
George
Senior Expert
3  George    4 hours ago

Only a fucking retard thinks that a organization outside of the Whitehouse should decide who has access to the Whitehouse, Kick all the fuckers out and make them earn a spot back in. 

 
 
 
Hallux
Professor Principal
3.1  seeder  Hallux  replied to  George @3    4 hours ago

[deleted][]

 
 
 
devangelical
Professor Principal
3.1.1  devangelical  replied to  Hallux @3.1    3 hours ago

this is how the self appointed defenders of the constitution and american values work ...

 
 
 
Sparty On
Professor Expert
4  Sparty On    4 hours ago

lol. …. Another losing position for our friends on the left.

This is just getting sadder by the day …..

 
 
 
George
Senior Expert
5  George    3 hours ago

How do you tell that an article was written by a lying piece of shit liberal? just read the headline.

Trump White House seeks tighter grip on message with new limits on press

The Whitehouse has put no restrictions on the press, they are free to lie as much as they want as this article proves. access is not restricting their freedom of press.  

 
 
 
Sparty On
Professor Expert
5.1  Sparty On  replied to  George @5    3 hours ago

Shameless.    That’s the word you are looking for.

 
 
 
George
Senior Expert
5.1.1  George  replied to  Sparty On @5.1    3 hours ago

Only one problem with that. in order to feel shame, you have to have some level of integrity or honor which is sorely lacking in the liberal media.

 
 
 
Ozzwald
Professor Quiet
5.2  Ozzwald  replied to  George @5    3 hours ago
The Whitehouse has put no restrictions on the press

Can you call the Associated Press and tell them that?

Trump says AP will be curtailed at the White House until it changes its style to Gulf of America

 
 
 
George
Senior Expert
5.2.1  George  replied to  Ozzwald @5.2    3 hours ago

So show me an actual article where trump has restricted the AP from publishing anything, Those liberal fucktards are free to write as many lies as they want.

 
 
 
Greg Jones
Professor Participates
5.2.2  Greg Jones  replied to  Ozzwald @5.2    3 hours ago

They have no claim on access, since they consistently publish left wing lies and propaganda

 
 
 
Ozzwald
Professor Quiet
5.2.3  Ozzwald  replied to  Greg Jones @5.2.2    2 hours ago
They have no claim on access, since they consistently publish left wing lies and propaganda

Wow, another unsubstantiated claim.

 
 
 
Mark in Wyoming
Professor Silent
6  Mark in Wyoming     3 hours ago

Looks to me like members of the "press" will have to brush up on their "investigative  reporting " techniques and methods .

 
 
 
Jeremy Retired in NC
Professor Expert
6.1  Jeremy Retired in NC  replied to  Mark in Wyoming @6    2 hours ago

You mean they would have to do more than the blogger work they are doing?  They might have to work!!!!!

 
 
 
Jeremy Retired in NC
Professor Expert
7  Jeremy Retired in NC    3 hours ago
The AP filed a lawsuit over the ban, saying the White House violated its First Amendment free speech rights and its Fifth Amendment procedural rights

And the "ban" isn't violating EITHER.  It's not like Trump is following the preceding administration's actions and telling them what they can and cannot publish.

 
 
 
Bob Nelson
Professor Guide
8  Bob Nelson    3 hours ago

Free speech 

  jrSmiley_86_smiley_image.gif

 
 
 
George
Senior Expert
8.1  George  replied to  Bob Nelson @8    3 hours ago

Please discribe in detail if you are able to how free speech has been resrticted?

 
 
 
Bob Nelson
Professor Guide
8.1.1  Bob Nelson  replied to  George @8.1    46 minutes ago

I'm sorry, but I don't do the homework that others don't want to do or are incapable of doing.

 
 
 
Sparty On
Professor Expert
8.1.2  Sparty On  replied to  Bob Nelson @8.1.1    14 minutes ago

Keep running from your comments

 
 
 
Greg Jones
Professor Participates
8.2  Greg Jones  replied to  Bob Nelson @8    2 hours ago

From Vic elsewhere....

"The Trump administration announced that it would follow the Biden administration precedent of handpicking reporters/news outlets who could ask questions of the President."     jrSmiley_40_smiley_image.gif

 
 
 
JBB
Professor Principal
9  JBB    2 hours ago

original

 
 
 
Sparty On
Professor Expert
9.1  Sparty On  replied to  JBB @9    9 minutes ago

Funny saying by today’s standards.    The folks who claim to be so intelligent (my friends on the left) are neither muzzled or intelligent.    Never been louder in my experience than right now and intelligent?    Well, I’ll let folks observe that exaggeration for themselves.

 
 

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