Albany Times Union (Sunday)

Aide threatens reporter, resigns

Deputy press secretary had been suspended

- By Alexandra Jaffe

White House deputy press secretary T.J. Ducklo has resigned, the day after he was suspended for issuing a sexist and profane threat to a journalist seeking to cover his relationsh­ip with another reporter.

Ducklo had been put on a weeklong suspension without pay on Friday after a report surfaced in Vanity Fair outlining his sexist threats against a female Politico journalist to try to suppress a story about his relationsh­ip, telling her “I will destroy you.” The journalist had been seeking to report on his relationsh­ip with a political reporter at Axios who had previously covered the Biden campaign and transition.

In a statement Saturday, Ducklo said he was “devastated to have embarrasse­d and disappoint­ed my White House colleagues and President Biden.”

“No words can express my regret, my embarrassm­ent and my disgust for my behavior,” he said. I used language that no woman should ever have to hear from anyone, especially in a situation where she was just trying to do her job. It was language that was abhorrent, disrespect­ful and unacceptab­le.”

Before Politico broke the story Tuesday, People

Magazine published a glowing profile of the relationsh­ip.

It’s the first departure from the new administra­tion, less than a month into President

Joe Biden’s tenure, and it comes as the White House was facing criticism for not living up to standards set by Biden himself in their decision to retain Ducklo.

During a virtual swearing-in for staff on Inaugurati­on Day, Biden said that “if you ever work with me and I hear you treat another colleague with disrespect, talk down to someone, I will fire you on the spot.”

“No ifs, ands or buts,“Biden added.

White House press secretary Jen Psaki faced a flurry of questions about the controvers­y Friday, with reporters highlighti­ng Biden’s comments and questionin­g the decision to suspend Ducklo for a week.

Confronted with those comments from the president, Psaki said Friday that Ducklo’s conduct “doesn’t meet our standards, it doesn’t meet the president’s standard, and it was important that we took a step to make that clear.”

On Saturday, Psaki said Ducklo’s decision came with the support of White House chief of staff Ron Klain, and added that “we are committed to striving every day to meet the standard set by the President in treating others with dignity and respect, with civility and with a value for others through our words and our actions.”

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