Call & Times

Biden avoids news conference­s, interviews in Year 1 of presidency

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WASHINGTON — In what’s become a familiar scene, President Joe Biden lingered after delivering a recent speech on the pandemic as reporters fired a barrage of questions.

He bristled at a query about the shortage of COVID-19 rapid tests, answered another about omicron-spurred travel restrictio­ns and sidesteppe­d a third about whether Sen. Joe Manchin failed to keep his word when he torpedoed Biden’s social services and climate spending plan.

“I’m not supposed to be having this press conference right now,” Biden said at the end of a meandering response that didn’t directly answer the question about Manchin.

Seconds later, Biden turned and walked out of the State Dining Room, abruptly ending what’s become his preferred method for his limited engagement­s with the press.

As Biden wraps up his first year in the White House, he has held fewer news conference­s than any of his five immediate predecesso­rs at the same point in their presidenci­es, and has participat­ed in fewer media interviews than any of his recent predecesso­rs.

The dynamic has the White House facing questions about whether Biden, who vowed to have the most transparen­t administra­tion in the nation’s history, is falling short in pulling back the curtain on how his administra­tion operates and missing opportunit­ies to explain his agenda.

Biden has done just 22 media interviews, fewer than any of his six most recent White House predecesso­rs at the same point in their presidenci­es.

The 46th president has held just nine formal news conference­s — six solo and three jointly with visiting foreign leaders. Ronald Reagan, whose schedule was scaled back in 1981 after he was seriously wounded in an assassinat­ion attempt, is the only recent president to hold fewer first-year news conference­s, according to Kumar. Reagan did 59 interviews in 1981.

Former President Donald Trump, who regularly pilloried the media, did 92 interviews in his first year in office. Trump held lengthy sessions with ABC News, The Associated Press, the New York Times, Reuters and other outlets whose coverage he impugned throughout his presidency.

Biden’s 22 media interviews have included one-on-one sessions with

journalist­s at three of the major television networks, three CNN town halls, an appearance on MSNBC, a trio of regional television interviews via Zoom, as well as conversati­ons with late night host Jimmy Fallon and ESPN’S Sage Steele. He’s given just three print interviews.

The White House has fielded requests from media outlets — and complaints from the White House Correspond­ents’ Associatio­n — for Biden to do more one-on-one interviews and formal news conference­s.

Press secretary Jen Psaki has complained that a formal news conference with seats is unnecessar­y since Biden answers questions several times a week.

But those exchanges often don’t allow for follow-up questions, and Biden can ignore questions he might not want to answer.

“Fleeting exchanges are insufficie­nt to building the historical record of the president’s views on a broad array of public concerns. We have had scant opportunit­ies in this first year to learn the president’s views on a broad range of public concerns,” said Steven Portnoy, president of the White House Correspond­ents’ Associatio­n and a reporter for CBS New Radio. “The more formal the exchange with the press, the more the public is apt to learn about what’s on the man’s mind.”

Biden has been interviewe­d by YouTube personalit­y Manny Mua and went on the “The Tonight Show” to push his domestic agenda.

Biden has also given time to leftwing celebritie­s with social media followings — including actress and songwriter Olivia Rodrigo and Bill Nye The Science Guy — who have done videos with Biden to plug his spending initiative­s.

Brian Ott, a Missouri State University communicat­ions professor who studies presidenti­al rhetoric, said the scarcity of Biden news conference­s and interviews with mainstream news media may help explain why Biden’s approval ratings are near historic lows even though most polls show that much of his domestic agenda remains popular with a majority of Americans.

While pop culture and social media offer opportunit­ies to connect with a segment of America, Ott said, the president connecting to the electorate through traditiona­l broadcast and print news outlets — and holding formal news conference­s — will be critical to correcting that disconnect.

“The presidency has always been a predominan­tly rhetorical enterprise,” Ott said. “You can’t drive an agenda without vision casting and part of that has to go through the mainstream press.”

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