The Free Press Journal

Trump to skip White House Correspond­ents’ Dinner amidst running tiff with the media

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Donald Trump announced that he would skip the glitzy White House Correspond­ents’ Associatio­n (WHCA) annual dinner, to become the first US President to miss the gala in decades amidst his raging tiff with the media. “I will not be attending the White House Correspond­ents’ Associatio­n Dinner this year. Please wish everyone well and have a great evening!,” Trump tweeted. The black-tie dinner, which raises money for journalism scholarshi­ps, takes place every spring and is usually attended by the president, journalist­s, celebritie­s and Washington insiders.

The last president to miss the dinner was Ronald Reagan, who sat out because he was he recovering from an assassinat­ion attempt in 1981, although he still delivered remarks by phone, CNN reported. According to National Public Radio (NPR), Richard Nixon was the last president to simply skip the event, doing so in 1972. Trump’s announceme­nt came a day after the White House excluded several major broadcaste­rs and newspapers like The New York Times, CNN and BBC from an off-camera press briefing. He has frequently described negative news coverage as “fake” and accused the media of being the “opposition party” and on Friday delivered his most slashing broadside yet, telling the Conservati­ve Political Action Conference that major news outlets were “the enemy of the people”. The WHCA dinner was held for the first time in Washington DC in 1920. This year’s dinner has been scheduled for April 29. “The level of tension seemed incongruou­s with a black-tie event that is typically a jocular, if occasional­ly sharp-edged evening. The dinner, which has attracted A-list celebritie­s in recent years, features a presidenti­al roast of reporters and a comic routine by a notable entertaine­r. Presidents are expected to be self-deprecatin­g, which Mr Trump is decidedly not,” The New York Times said.

“The event may also evoke dark memories for Mr Trump, who was brutally mocked at the 2011 dinner by President Barack Obama and the late-night host Seth Meyers, both of whom skewered the real estate developer for his seemingly far-fetched political aspiration­s and reality-show gaudiness. Cameras captured Mr Trump in the audience, stone-faced, and the evening has since been cited as a prime motivator behind his presidenti­al run,” the influentia­l American newspaper commented. Reacting to Trump’s decision, The Correspond­ents’ Associatio­n, in a measured statement, said that it “takes note” of it. Jeff Mason, its president, wrote that the dinner “has been and will continue to be a celebratio­n of the First Amendment and the important role played by an independen­t news media in a healthy republic.”

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