The Commercial Appeal

President takes on Washington leaks

- DAVID BAUDER AND JONATHAN LEMIRE

NEW YORK - When White House press secretary Sean Spicer wanted to crack down on leaks last week, he collected his aides’ cellphones to check for communicat­ion with reporters. The crackdown quickly leaked.

Spicer’s losing round in Washington’s perpetual game of informatio­n whack-amole was hardly a surprise. In trying to plug leaks from anonymous sources, President Donald Trump and his aides are going after one of the most entrenched practices in Washington politics and journalism, an exercise that has exposed corruption, fueled scandals and spread gossip for decades.

But the practice has created several headaches for the new president, leading Trump, just weeks into his presidency, to publicly vow to try to punish “lowlife leakers” in his own administra­tion.

“Let their name be put out there,” Trump said before the Conservati­ve Political Action Conference on Friday, accusing reporters of making up anonymous sources and stories. He declared reporters shouldn’t be allowed to use sources “unless they use somebody’s name.”

“‘A source says that Donald Trump is a horrible, horrible human being.’ Let ’em say it to my face.”

But Trump’s administra­tion has not been practicing what the boss preached. Despite the president’s anger about unnamed sources, White House budget officials insisted on anonymity Monday as they outlined details of Trump’s spending plans to reporters on a conference call. The budget officials ignored requests to put the briefing on the record.

Several anonymousl­y sourced stories have driven Trump coverage: revelation­s that former National Security Adviser Michael Flynn had lied about conversati­ons with Russians about sanctions; details of private phone calls Trump had with leaders of Australia and Mexico; draft memos of policy plans for actions like rounding up undocument­ed aliens.

Trump isn’t the first president to be frustrated by leaks.

From the release of the Pentagon Papers on Vietnam policy, the Watergate scandal that brought down President Richard Nixon, to Edward Snowden’s data dump of national security files, American history is filled with stories of government misconduct that came to light through informatio­n passed privately into the hands of journalist­s.

“Leaking is gigantical­ly important in modern presidenti­al coverage and Washington history,” said Frank Sesno, a former CNN Washington bureau chief and now a journalism professor at George Washington University.

Journalist­s prefer that sources go on the record; it lends more credibilit­y to the stories. But on important areas of national security, it’s understand­able when people insist upon anonymity, Dean Baquet, executive editor of The New York Times, said Sunday on CNN’s “Reliable Sources.”

“These are not people who pull us aside because they want to screw Donald Trump,” Baquet said. “These are people who are worried about the direction of the government . ... In an administra­tion that has expressed so much distaste for the press and so much distaste for our role, are you surprised that some of the people who want to criticize the administra­tion want to do it without their names attached? I’m not.”

Leaks have progressed beyond the days of clandestin­e meetings in darkened parking garages — although that still happens. Since leakers can be tracked if they use government-issued phones, journalist­s and sources have increasing­ly turned to encrypted messaging services, such as Signal, that aren’t logged by phone companies, with messages that can be programmed to selfdestru­ct after they are viewed.

Spicer called the White House communicat­ions staff into his office to express his frustratio­n with unauthoriz­ed leaks to reporters, according to two people with knowledge of the meeting but not authorized to discuss it publicly. He asked the aides to provide him with both their government-issued and personal cellphones so he could check communicat­ions with journalist­s.

He also told them that use of encrypted texting apps was a violation of the Federal Records Act and had representa­tives from the White House counsel’s office in the meeting, according to one person with knowledge of the meeting. That person said Monday that Trump was not aware of the inquiry.

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