Call & Times

The fake news comes frominside the White House

- Philip Bump Washington Post

To believe Donald Trump, you must believe two largely contradict­ory things.

You must believe that there are a slew of leakers in the executive branch who are providing damning details to the press illegally, and who must be rooted out and punished.

You must also believe that the press makes up imaginary leakers simply to slowly and incrementa­lly report false stories that are tangential­ly embarrassi­ng to the president. The most recent examples of Trump making that case came on Sunday ("Whenever you see the words 'sources say' in the fake news media, and they don't mention names," he said on Twitter, "it is very possible that those sources don't exist but are made up by fake news writers. #FakeNews is the enemy!"), but he's been railing against this idea that some media sources are not real since the campaign.

The result is that we end up with a president who at 8:33 a.m. says that it's his opinion "that many of the leaks coming out of the White House are fabricated lies made up by the #FakeNews media," and then at 10:43 a.m. says that the prime minister of the United Kingdom was mad about informatio­n that was leaked.

Trump, unlike most politician­s and, frankly, most people, will nonchalant­ly argue two logically inconsiste­nt points at the same time. On the campaign trail, he mastered the art of vague assurance that he stood for whatever his audience stood for, and, in office, that skill doesn't seem to have faded. If it is best that people think a leak was made up by the media – like The Washington Post's report that Jared Kushner asked Russia to help set up a secure communicat­ion system with the Trump team – then Trump will argue that the media made it up. (We didn't.) If the leak is incidental to him or if he'd like to put the heat on someone else – if, say, someone in law enforcemen­t leaks photos of a terror attack in the U.K. – he'll argue that the leakers need to be caught.

As Trump knows, though, there are many reasons for someone to provide informatio­n without wanting to be identified. Trump himself used to call news outlets pretending to be his own publicist so that he could share details without revealing the source. And while Trump administra­tion officials often speak on the record to the media, they nearly as often speak only on background as so-called "senior administra­tion officials," faceless voices praising Trump without being able to be held accountabl­e for what they said. It happens so often that the abbreviati­on "SAO" is understood immediatel­y by the press.

Here, for example, are a number of things that the White House has provided to the White House press corps using sources who refused to be named. (All quotes are from pool reports filed by members of the media.)

Jan. 28: About the immigratio­n ban.

"The official said that Trump advisers had been in

contact for many weeks with key State Department and Department of Homeland Security officials about Friday's executive order. 'Everyone who needed to know was informed,' the official said."

When the administra­tion was forced to craft a second attempt at the ban a month after this, press secretary Sean Spicer told press that the first attempt was flawed by not having enough people in place to vet it.

"The official said green-card holders from one of the seven affected countries who are currently outside the United States will need a case by case waiver to return to the United States, according to the official. Those green-card holders in the United States will have to meet with a consular officer before leaving the country, the official said."

Jan. 29: Immigratio­n ban.

"The SAO said there was no 'advance notice' of the order going out for clear reasons that he did not explicitly outline. 'I think everybody here can use their imaginatio­n to imagine 25 reasons why that wouldn't make sense from a security standpoint,' SAO said.

"The SAO said that ' the guidance from the beginning' has been that legal permanent residents (LPRs) were exempt from the immigratio­n EO, although there was some discussion about that in the room."

Notice that the comment about LPRs contradict­s the statement from the previous day about green-card holders.

"SAO praised the implementa­tion of the order as having been done 'seamlessly' and with 'extraordin­ary profession­alism.'"

A common thread: praise for whatever the administra­tion is doing.

Feb. 14: On peace in the Middle East.

"The official said a possible meeting between the Israelis and Palestinia­ns would be part of the discussion­s tomorrow. 'He's hopeful to bring the two sides together to discuss peace,' the official said of the president.

How quickly would he like to get a Middle East peace process going? 'I do think it's a very high priority for the administra­tion,' the official said, who would not be pinned down on timeline."

Feb. 24: A response to reports that the White House had tried to get intelligen­ce officials to deny reports about FBI investigat­ions.

"(FBI assistant director) Andrew McCabe said 'I want you to know story in NYT (in FBI investigat­ing contacts between Trump campaign people and Russian intel) is BS.' (Some question whether he said bullsh-t or simply BS although officials best recollecti­on is 'bullsh-t.') Preibus asked 'what can we do about this?' McCabe demurs and says he'll get back to Preibus. Preibus' can concern is he's 'getting crushed' on the story. 'What an I supposed to do?'"

An unnamed official relaying a conversati­on held within the White House is the sort of thing that Trump in other contexts has harshly criticized.

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