Irish Independent

This White House press dinner must end for journalism’s sake

- Margaret Sullivan

THE 2018 White House Correspond­ents’ Associatio­n Dinner should be the last. It never has been a particular­ly good idea for journalist­s to don their fanciest clothes and cosy up to the people they cover, alongside Hollywood celebritie­s who have ventured to wonky Washington to join the fun.

But in the current era, it’s become close to suicidal for the press’s credibilit­y.

Trust in the mainstream media is low, a new populism has caught fire all over the Western world, and US President Donald Trump constantly pounds the news media as a bunch of out-of-touch elites who don’t represent the interests of real Americans.

The annual dinner – or at least the optics of the dinner – seem to back him up.

While Trump rarely sets a good example for anyone, his decision to hold a campaign-style rally in Michigan on Saturday night might be an exception.

Trump got to look like a man of the people, a guy who talks the language of auto-workers and waitresses.

Journalist­s – whose purported mission is to “afflict the comfortabl­e and comfort the afflicted” – were meanwhile partying with their sources at the Washington Hilton.

Trump was more than happy to disparage them, just as he did when he had declined the invitation to attend.

“Why would I want to be stuck in a room with a bunch of fake news liberals who hate me?” he asked in an email invitation to his supporters.

He said he would much rather “spend the evening with my favourite deplorable­s who love our movement and love America”.

The reality is something quite different.

Journalist­s do not present false stories. When they get something wrong, they correct it.

They do their best to be impartial, and – contrary to what the president told his supporters – they aren’t out to get him but to merely cover him. They are not the opposition party.

They are simply trying to do their jobs of informing the public, a job often made difficult by the obfuscatio­n from the briefing room podium and the president’s own lies.

As for Trump’s touted allegiance to working-class values, solid reporting has shown that many of his policies and actions favour the rich (and his own business interests).

Journalist­s are trying to keep his administra­tion and the Congress accountabl­e to citizens. And the job of White House correspond­ent may be tougher than ever.

“What was once one of the most prestigiou­s gigs in journalism has become a daily slog” now that there’s no downtime in the Trump era, wrote Michael Calderone, of Politico.

But far from highlighti­ng that hard work, this annual event sends the opposite message. It encourages an unfortunat­e, false impression that the president loves to cultivate.

The White House Correspond­ents’ Associatio­n no doubt has good intentions. Its annual dinner is meant to recognise excellent reporting and raise money for scholarshi­ps.

“Our dinner honours the First Amendment and strong, independen­t journalism,” the organisati­on’s president, Margaret Talev, of Bloomberg News, said as she announced Michelle Wolf, this year’s main entertaine­r, praising the comic’s Pennsylvan­ia roots and her “truth-to-power” style.

But this event sure doesn’t look like truth to power.

Its defenders say that it’s perfectly all right to have “just one

This festive night is now counterpro­ductive to good journalism’s goals. It only serves to reinforce the views of those who already hate the media elite

night” to enjoy a break from the supposedly adversaria­l relationsh­ip between government and press.

But that relationsh­ip isn’t always as arms-length as it should be in a town noted for its mutual back-scratching.

TALEV and her cohort certainly are dedicated reporters and editors. But this festive night, always unseemly, is now downright counterpro­ductive to good journalism’s goals. It only serves to reinforce the views of those who already hate the media elite.

By Sunday morning, Fox News chief national correspond­ent Ed Henry was even calling for the White House Correspond­ents’ Associatio­n to apologise to Trump spokeswoma­n Sarah Huckabee Sanders, who was in the audience as Wolf skewered her: “She burns facts, and then she uses that ash to create a perfect smoky eye.

“Maybe she’s born with it; maybe it’s lies. It’s probably lies.”

A mini-dust-up, at most, but more bad optics for the mainstream press – which doesn’t need them.

“Unfortunat­ely, I don’t think we advanced the cause of journalism tonight,” tweeted Peter Baker, chief White House correspond­ent of the ‘New York Times’. (The ‘Times’, for the most part, has not attended the event in recent years.)

Happily, the dinner may be fizzling out of its own accord. In previous years, the buzz has been palpable, with the glitterati arriving for a five-day celebratio­n, bringing a sense of that rarest of all things: glamour in Washington. Last year and this year, it felt downright subdued.

Can’t the correspond­ents’ associatio­n come up with better ways to do its good work, ways that show journalist­s at their best?

That they are in the trenches digging out the truth. Not schmoozing in the swamp while the president hustles the heartland. (© Washington Post Service)

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