Boston Herald

Biden needs to start taking tough questions

-

Britain’s rumpled Prime Minister Boris Johnson has plenty of reasons to fear the press.

He was fatally slow to respond in the early weeks of the COVID19 crisis. His former aide, Dominic Cummings, has already offered up a Shakespear­ean level of vitriol in his revelatory tome about the shortcomin­gs of his boss. There is that fight with the French. Lots of criticism on Afghanista­n. Gas bills. Brexit fallout. Cabinet reshufflin­g chaos.

And there is even the pressing matter as to just how many children have the right to call Johnson dad. Six, Johnson only recently confirmed, as jaws dropped all over Britain.

Plenty of reason, then to hide in the corner. But there was a relaxed Johnson at the White House, looking like he was having a great time in one of his favorite countries, calling on British reporters to ask questions and engaging in the time-honored democratic practice of riposte and retort with the assigned representa­tives of his bosses, otherwise known as the electorate.

President Joe Biden has problems, too, beginning with the total chaos at the border involving overwhelme­d border guards, thousands of impoverish­ed Haitian migrants and an immigratio­n strategy so riven by internal disagreeme­nt within the administra­tion that it cannot seem to make a single clear decision about anything.

There’s the fight over COVID19 booster shots; looming inflation from, in part, too much federal largesse; and the legacy of the indefensib­ly chaotic U.S. exit from Afghanista­n, not least of which is the Aug. 29 drone strike in that pained nation.

No wonder, then, that Biden was heard to say, “good luck,” when Johnson announced his intention to take questions from the media.

Conservati­ves often say that reporters have treated Biden with kid gloves compared with the prior administra­tion and any rational, nonpartisa­n thinker can see they have a point. Few East Coast columnists rose up in indignatio­n over the drone killings; had that been on Trump’s watch, newspaper opinion sections would have been ablaze with fury.

What happened at that august residence Wednesday was not on that level, but still shameful.

Johnson took care of his nation’s media as he should. But when U.S. reporters tried to question their own leader, Biden’s communicat­ions team, in this instance better understood as a non-communicat­ions team, basically drowned out their own boss and hustled reporters out of the room.

At that point, the Biden administra­tion’s lack of transparen­cy and the president’s unwillingn­ess to hold a news conference became too much even for sympatheti­c reporters. All over New York and Washington, the righteous indignatio­n of a trained journalist trying to do a job crucial to American democracy kicked into gear. The memory of Biden not taking questions after major addresses on Aug. 16, Aug. 18, Aug. 31, and Sept. 9 started to smart, and many reporters took to Twitter to say, in essence, why the heck is this administra­tion so afraid of questions?

We’re amplifying those observatio­ns here: Why indeed?

On Thursday, Biden administra­tion communicat­ions director Jen Psaki tried to blame Johnson, of all people, for disrupting her careful control of the event. He took questions without announcing that intention in advance!, she complained. That is a ridiculous argument. Reporters in the presence of world leaders are supposed to ask questions, especially at staged events.

And if those leaders value democracy, they should make every effort to answer them.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States