The Guardian (USA)

Biden pledged media reset after Trump – so why so few press conference­s?

- Lauren Gambino in Washington

When Joe Biden finished delivering a televised update on the administra­tion’s coronaviru­s response last week, aides began to usher the press towards the exit as reporters shouted questions. Biden declined to answer.

“Folks, we’ll talk about that later,” he said. Then came a question from NBC’S Kelly O’Donnell he couldn’t ignore: “Maybe a press conference soon, Mr President? We would look forward to that.”

“Me too,” he replied.

The next day, the White House announced that Biden would hold the 10th press conference of his presidency, far fewer than any of his recent predecesso­rs during their first year in office. It was scheduled for Wednesday, on the eve of his first anniversar­y as president.

When Biden steps up to the lectern, he does so facing myriad challenges and setbacks – and a press corps eager to ask him about all of it.

His domestic agenda is stalled in the Senate, where his push on voting rights legislatio­n has also hit a wall; inflation is the highest it has been in nearly four decades; and the supreme court rejected the administra­tion’s vaccine-or-test mandate, a key part of his plan to combat the pandemic, now in its third year.

The goodwill Biden enjoyed early in his presidency has mostly dried up, as his approval rating has fallen to 42% from 53% when he took office, according to FiveThirty­Eight’s average of public polls.

But it also comes amid the growing calls from journalist­s and press freedom advocates for Biden to engage more directly with reporters.

In a sharp shift from Donald Trump, Biden has said journalist­s are “indispensa­ble to the functionin­g of democracy”, which the president has repeatedly warned is under threat at home and abroad. Yet press access to the president has been limited.

Last week, the Committee to Protect Journalist­s (CPJ) released a report grading the president’s approach to the media at home as well as his administra­tion’s support for press freedom globally during his first year in office.

Titled Night and Day, the report praised the Biden White House for an “almost complete reversal of the Trump administra­tion’s unpreceden­tedly pervasive and damaging hostility”, which it said “seriously damaged the news media’s credibilit­y and often spread misinforma­tion around the world”.

Yet the report criticized the president for his limited availabili­ty to journalist­s. As he ends his first year, Biden has held fewer press conference­s and participat­ed in fewer interviews than nearly all of his recent predecesso­rs.

Biden has held just nine formal news conference­s during his first year, according to research compiled by Martha Joynt Kumar, director of the White House Transition Project. Trump had held 22 and Barack Obama 27 at the same point in their presidenci­es.

Only Ronald Reagan, whose public appearance­s were scaled back following an assassinat­ion attempt in March 1981, held fewer press conference­s during his first year. But Reagan did 59 interviews that year, compared with Biden, who has only done 22.

Trump, who labeled the media the “enemy of the American people” and once praised a congressma­n who assaulted a reporter, did 92 interviews during his first year. Many of those interviews were with friendly outlets, but they also included the major networks and media organizati­ons he frequently impugned, such as the New York Times and ABC News.

Biden does field questions more frequently than his predecesso­rs, but takes fewer of them, according to Kumar’s tally. These impromptu exchanges with reporters often follow scheduled remarks or public appearance­s. “For the president, it is a question of how do you use your time?” Kumar said. “And for Biden, he has wanted to use his time negotiatin­g privately on his policies.”

She expects Wednesday’s press conference to mark the beginning of a more public phase for the White House, as it tries to build support for Biden’s agenda before next year’s midterms.

Asked about Biden’s relative lack of one-on-one interviews and formal news conference­s, White House press secretary, Jen Psaki, pushed back, arguing that the president interacted with the press frequently and questions from reporters multiple times per week.

“I think the American people have seen him out there, answering questions,” she said. “He will continue to be. That’s an important part of his engagement with the press and the public.”

Due to the brief nature of his interactio­ns, and his tendency to make mistakes when speaking extemporan­eously, Kumar said Biden relies heavily on his cabinet and his team to communicat­e the White House’s agenda.

“Biden doesn’t feel the need to talk all the time,” she said. “From his viewpoint, it’s not just the president but the whole administra­tion and Biden is willing to let them speak in his stead.”

It is a stark contrast to the Trump years, when the president regularly contradict­ed his team and press briefings were irregular, hostile and rife with falsehoods. One of Trump’s press secretarie­s, Stephanie Grisham, refused to hold any briefings at all.

“We got used to the Trump way of communicat­ing,” she added, “but Biden is very different.”

After four years of attacks on the press by the former president and his team, Biden saw resetting relations with the media as a “big priority”, Psaki said.

“Our objective is to – has been to – re-instill normalcy and engagement with reporters, whether we agree or disagree, whether there is a partisan tilt to an outlet or not,” she said. “And I think we have conducted ourselves accordingl­y.”

Press briefings and fleeting exchanges with the press are not standins for hearing directly and at length from the president, said Leonard Downie Jr, author of the CPJ report and a former executive editor of the Washington Post.

“It is still the only opportunit­y for large numbers of the press who cover Washington and cover the administra­tion, who are knowledgab­le about what they’re doing, to be able to ask questions and follow-up questions in depth,” Downie told reporters.

Downie acknowledg­ed the drawbacks of a press conference: the potential for political theater, grandstand­ing by reporters and filibuster­ing by the president. Yet he said events present a “valuable” opportunit­y for Americans to hear directly from the president – and for the world to see a leader field tough question from a free and independen­t press.

The CPJ report credited the Biden administra­tion for taking steps to protect press freedoms, but cautioned that more work was needed.

Biden restored the editorial independen­ce of the United States Agency for Global Media, home of the Voice of America and Radio Free Europe, deeply undermined by the Trump administra­tion. Hours after his inaugurati­on, Biden dismissed the agency’s Trump-appointed chief executive.

In July, the attorney general, Merrick Garland, issued a memo banning federal prosecutor­s from using subpoenas, warrants or court orders to obtain reporters’ telephone and email records in leak investigat­ions, placing sharp new limits on a practice used by both the Trump and Obama administra­tions. And a spokesman for the Department of Justice told Downie that its investigat­ions into the local police department­s in Minneapoli­s, Louisville and Phoenix would include law enforcemen­t’s treatment of journalist­s covering Black Lives Matter protests.

Yet despite Biden’s pledge to lead the most transparen­t administra­tion in the nation’s history, journalist­s and experts interviewe­d for the CPJ report said there had been “little improvemen­t” in the responsive­ness of government agencies to journalist­s’ requests for informatio­n and that “too many briefings and conversati­ons” with administra­tion officials are conducted on “deep background” and unattribut­able.

Press freedom advocates told the CPJ that the White House’s actions have “fallen short” of its lofty rhetoric. In the report, they faulted the administra­tion for failing to extract Afghan journalist­s during the chaotic US military withdrawal, as well as for failing to hold the Saudi crown prince, Mohammed bin Salman, accountabl­e for the murder of the Washington Post columnist Jamal Khashoggi.

It also raised concerns among press freedom advocates with the Department of Justice’s 2019 decision to extradite the WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange under the espionage act, which they warn could set a “dangerous precedent for use against journalist­s trying to do their jobs”.

“We as press freedom advocates and journalist­s need the United States to stand up and affirm … the first amendment values freedom of the press,” said Robert Mahoney, CPJ’s deputy executive director. “It cannot do that credibly on the internatio­nal stage if press freedom is not fully respected at home in the United States.”

 ?? Drew Angerer/Getty Images ?? Reporters gather round Joe Biden on the South Lawn of the White House in December. Biden has held just nine formal press conference­s in his first year as president. Photograph:
Drew Angerer/Getty Images Reporters gather round Joe Biden on the South Lawn of the White House in December. Biden has held just nine formal press conference­s in his first year as president. Photograph:
 ?? Corum/Getty Images ?? Jen Psaki in the White House briefing room in March. Photograph: Samuel
Corum/Getty Images Jen Psaki in the White House briefing room in March. Photograph: Samuel

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