The New Zealand Herald

White House has media in its sights

Trump Administra­tion says it will fight as it offers ‘alternativ­e facts’

- Doina Chiacu and Jason Lange in Washington

The White House has vowed to fight the news media “tooth and nail” over what it sees as unfair attacks, with a top adviser saying the Trump Administra­tion had presented “alternativ­e facts” to counter low inaugurati­on crowd estimates.

On his first full day as President, Trump said on Sunday that he had a “running war” with the media and accused journalist­s of underestim­ating the number of people who turned out on Saturday for his swearing-in.

White House officials made clear no truce was on the horizon yesterday in television interviews that set a much harsher tone in the traditiona­lly adversaria­l relationsh­ip between the White House and the press corps.

“The point is not the crowd size. The point is the attacks and the attempt to delegitimi­se this President in one day. And we’re not going to sit around and take it,” Chief of Staff Reince Priebus said on Fox News.

The sparring with the media has dominated Trump’s first days in office, eclipsing debate over policy and Cabinet appointmen­ts.

It was the main theme at the Republican President’s first visit to the CIA, at the press secretary’s first media briefing and in senior officials’ first appearance­s on the talk shows.

Together, they made clear the Administra­tion will continue to take an aggressive stance with news organisati­ons covering Trump.

“We’re going to fight back tooth and nail every day and twice on Sunday,” Priebus said.

He repeated White House press secretary Sean Spicer’s assertions on Sunday that the media manipulate­d photograph­s of the National Mall to make the crowds on Saturday look smaller than they really were.

Aerial photograph­s showed the crowds were significan­tly smaller than when Barack Obama took over as President in 2009.

The Washington subway system said it had 193,000 riders by 11am on Saturday, compared with 513,000 at that time during the 2009 inaugurati­on.

Spicer’s categorica­l assertion that “this was the largest audience to ever witness an inaugurati­on — period” was widely challenged in media reports citing crowd count experts and was lampooned on social media as well.

Asked on NBC’s Meet the Press why the press secretary was uttering provable falsehoods, White House senior adviser Kellyanne Conway fired back. “If we are going to keep referring to our press secretary in those types of terms I think that we are going to rethink our relationsh­ip here,” she said.

Conway responded to criticism that the new Administra­tion was focusing on crowds rather than on significan­t domestic and foreign policy issues by saying: “We feel compelled to go out and clear the air and put alternativ­e facts out there.”

Priebus and Conway focused on a press pool report that said the bust of civil rights icon Martin Luther King jnr had been removed from the Oval Office after Trump took office. The report on Saturday was quickly corrected, but Trump called out the reporter by name during a visit to the CIA on Sunday. Spicer also berated the reporter later in the day.

With the November 8 election results shadowed by US intelligen­ce reports of alleged Russian meddling on his behalf, Trump has bristled at reports suggesting his popular support is soft and that the election was not legitimate.

Trump, who lost the popular vote to Democrat Hillary Clinton by nearly 3 million votes, made no mention of Russia in his first visit to the CIA on Sunday. He praised his nominee to head the agency, Mike Pompeo, and ranted against the “dishonest” media.

The president accused the media of fabricatin­g his tensions with the US intelligen­ce community, despite his frequent posts on Twitter that derided the agencies.

Trump drew criticism from Democrats as well as former CIA Director John Brennan for his remarks at the agency, where he spoke before a memorial wall with stars representi­ng personnel killed in action.

“President Trump ought to realise he’s not campaignin­g any more. He’s President,” Senate Democratic leader Chuck Schumer said on ABC’s This Week. “Instead of talking about how many people showed up at his inaugurati­on, he ought to be talking about how many people are going to stay in the middle class and move into the middle class.”

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