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Outcry as White House bars top US media from briefing

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WASHINGTON: Major US media outlets condemned as “unacceptab­le” and an “insult to democratic ideals” a decision by President Donald Trump’s White House to bar several organizati­ons, including CNN and The New York Times, from a daily press briefing.

In an escalation in the administra­tion’s war on the media, the White House Friday excluded some outlets that have provided critical coverage from an off-camera event that replaced the traditiona­l on-camera daily briefing.

Friendly conservati­ve outlets like Fox News, the One America News Network and Breitbart News were allowed to attend, while the BBC, The Los Angeles Times and others were excluded.

Trump on Friday decried the media as the “enemy of the people,” a day after his top strategist promised relations with the press will get “worse every day.”

A number of news outlets that regularly cover the White House as part of the “pool,” including newswires Reuters and Bloomberg, attended the briefing.

The Associated Press boycotted in protest. AFP protested being excluded, despite being in the “pool,” and attended the briefing uninvited.

The White House Correspond­ents Associatio­n said it was “protesting strongly” against the White House decision, and promised to bring it up with White House staff.

During the off-camera briefing spokes- man Sean Spicer said that the White House has shown an “abundance of accessibil­ity... making ourselves, our team and our briefing room more accessible than probably any previous administra­tion.”

It is not uncommon for Republican and Democratic administra­tions to brief select reporters, but the event was initially billed as a regular briefing open to credential­ed media.

CNN anchor Jake Tapper decried the move as “un-American.”

“This is an unacceptab­le developmen­t by the Trump White House,” CNN’s communicat­ions department wrote on Twitter.

“Apparently this is how they retaliate when you report facts they don’t like. We’ll keep reporting regardless.”

The New York Times wrote in an editorial that the exclusion was an “unmistakab­le insult to democratic ideals.”

Several outlets referred to a December interview in which Spicer told Politico that the Trump White House would never ban a news outlet. “Conservati­ve, liberal or otherwise, I think that’s what makes a democracy a democracy versus a dictatorsh­ip,” he said.

Media organizati­ons were not alone in defending the free press.

“Trump is supposed to be a public servant, and the truth is a public good,” said Robert Reich, a UC Berkeley economist, former labor secretary and a prominent Democratic figure.

“But he continues to lie incessantl­y, and punish media that call him out,” Reich wrote on Facebook. “These are the sort of antics we’d expect from a two-bit dictator but not from the President of the United States.”

John Dean, the White House counsel for Republican President Richard Nixon in the 1970s, described the Trump media bashing as “more Nixonian than Nixon.”

Nixon blasted the media as “the enemy” behind closed doors, Dean, 78, told the Democracy Now! radio show on Friday.

“The big difference is, Trump is doing this right out” and challengin­g the US constituti­on’s first amendment that guarantees freedom of speech and of the press. He described it as “very startling and very troubling.”

“Nixon failed, and he had a deep reservoir of ill will to draw on when he got himself in real trouble. And I think Trump is creating the same problem for himself.”

Trump’s hostility toward the press “may be the greatest threat to democracy in my lifetime,” said William McRaven, a retired admiral and Navy SEAL who oversaw the raid that killed Al-Qaeda leader Osama Bin Laden in 2011.

McRaven made the remarks at the college of communicat­ion at the University of Texas at Austin, according to the student newspaper. McRaven became head of the UT system after retiring in 2014.

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