USA TODAY US Edition

Trump, Clinton threaten public’s right to know Carol E. Lee and Jeff Mason

- Carol Lee, the outgoing president of the White House Correspond­ents’ Associatio­n, is the White House correspond­ent for The Wall Street Journal and Jeff Mason, incoming president of the WHCA, is the White House correspond­ent for Reuters.

There is no debate that a free press with broad access to our elected officials, as guaranteed by the First Amendment, is a cornerston­e of our democracy. It is through the work of a free press that Americans learn how their elected officials conduct the public’s business and are able to hold those officials accountabl­e.

As the highest-ranking public official in the country, the president sets the tone. How he or she, or anyone seeking the White House, approaches the news media will be observed by officials in federal, state and local offices across the country. REPUBLICAN BANS That is why the White House Correspond­ents’ Associatio­n is alarmed by the treatment of the press in the 2016 presidenti­al campaign.

The public’s right to know is infringed if certain reporters are banned from a candidate's events because the candidate doesn’t like a story they have written or broadcast, as Donald Trump has done.

Similarly, refusing to regularly answer questions from reporters in a press conference, as Hillary Clinton has, deprives the American people of hearing from their potential commander-in-chief in a format that is critical to ensuring he or she is accountabl­e for policy positions and official acts.

We believe that whenever media access is restricted, the public’s right to know is restricted. Transparen­cy is the key to a well-informed electorate, and without a well-informed electorate, our democracy is put in jeopardy.

With that goal in mind, we advocate day-in and day-out at the White House for greater access to the president. We will continue to advocate for more access during this presidenti­al campaign. DEMOCRATIC DODGES The American people expect that anyone who seeks the highest office in the United States should be put under intense scrutiny. If he or she has an issue with that, Americans should take note.

The United States will not have a free press if its president gets to choose which journalist­s and which media organizati­ons are allowed access to the executive branch. We will not have a truly free press and an informed electorate if the president doesn’t believe he or she should be held accountabl­e to inquiries from the media. REPORTERS’ JOB It is a reporter’s job to cut through the rhetoric from candidates, scrutinize whether their policy proposals would benefit Americans in the way they claim and question the viability of their promises. If we cannot do our job, then the American people cannot do theirs.

That’s why we are concerned both with the rhetoric directed at the media in this campaign and the level of press access to the candidates. Both Clinton and Trump can do better.

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