The Oklahoman

Biden White House: Message discipline, no news conference

- By Jonathan Lemire and Alexandra Jaffe

WASHINGTON — No news conference. No Oval Office address. No primetime speech to a joint session of Congress.

President Joe Biden is the first executive in four decades to reach this point in his term without holding a formal question and answer session. It reflects a White House media strategy meant both to reserve major media setpieces for the celebratio­n of a legislativ­e victory and to limit unforced errors from a historical­ly gaffe-prone politician.

Biden has opted to take questions about as often as most of his recent predecesso­rs, but he tends to field just one or two informal inquires at a time, usually in a hurried setting at the end of an event.

In a sharp contrast with the previous administra­tion, the White House is exerting extreme message discipline, empowering staff to speak but doing so with caution. Recalling both Biden's largely leak-free campaign and the buttoned-up Obama administra­tion, the new White House team has carefully managed the president's appearance­s, trying to lower the temperatur­e from Donald Trump' s Washington and to save a big media moment to mark what could soon be a signature accomplish­ment: passage of the COVID-19 bill.

The message control may serve the president's purposes but it denies the media opportunit­ies to directly press Biden on major policy issues and to engage in the kind of backand-forth that can draw out informatio­n and thoughts that go beyond the administra­tion's curated talking points.

“The president has lost some opportunit­y, I think, to speak to the country from the bully pulpit. The volume has been turned solo win the Bid en White House that they need to worry about whether anyone is listening ,” said Frank Sesno, former head of George Washington University' s school of media. “But he's not great in these news conference­s. He rambles. His strongest communicat­ion is not extemporan­eous.”

Other modern presidents took more questions during their opening days in office.

By this point in their terms, Trump and George H.W. Bush had each held five press conference­s, Bill Clinton four, George W. Bush three, Barack Obama two and Ronald Reagan one, according to a study by Martha Kumar, presidenti­al scholar and professor emeritus at Towson University.

Biden has given five interviews as opposed to nine from Reagan and 23 from Obama.

“Biden came in with a plan for how they wanted to disseminat­e informatio­n. When you compare him with Trump, Biden has sense of how you use a staff, that a president can't do everything himself,” Kumar said. “Biden has a press secretary who gives regular briefings. He knows you hold a news conference when you have something to say, in particular a victory. They have an idea of how to use this time, early in the administra­tion when people are paying attention, and how valuable that is.”

The new president had taken questions 39 times, according to Kumar' s research, though usually just one or two shouted inquiries from a group of reporters known as the press pool at the end of an event in the White House's State Dining Room or Oval Office.

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