Friday, January 30, 2009

New York Times Reporter Furious at Obama White House (Press Office Monkeyshines)

I am really shocked that the Obama White House is not seeing the problem here. I thought they were the smart ones.

Problems in Paradise

IF A DEMOCRATIC WHITE HOUSE PISSES HIM OFF LIKE THIS, IT MUST REALLY BE BAD I've had plenty of run-ins over the years with New York Times reporter David Cay Johnson. Seems like the Obama White House is having a few, too. From the Columbia Journalism Review site:
It’s 3 p.m. and the phone in the White House press secretary’s office is ringing. It rings and rings and rings. Eventually, a recorded voice asks callers to leave a message—followed by a second voice saying the voicemail box is full.
After a full week of such calls, a human being answers. But Ben LaBolt immediately bristles when asked to spell his name, refuses to give his job title, and says he is going “off the record” until I stop him to explain that the reporter grants that privilege, not the other way around—a basic journalistic standard that LaBolt seems unaware of. He soon hangs up without even hearing what I called to ask about.
A return call is answered by Priya Singh, who spells her name when asked, but does not know (or will not say) what her job title is and several times describes requests for information about how the Obama administration press office is operating as a “complaint” which she would pass on. She says she is not authorized to comment, though she at one point tells me she is a spokesperson.
...While it is too early to judge just how this will work out, the early signs are troubling. And interviews with a dozen Washington reporters indicate that the Obama press operation tends to embrace friendly questions, while treating skeptical questions as not worth their time or, worse, as coming from an enemy.
I have called 202-456-2580, the main number for the White House press office, going back to the Nixon administration. Never has anyone in the press office declined to spell his name, give his job title, or hung up, even after the kind of aggressive exchanges that used to be common between journalists and flacks—and between journalists and high government officials, for that matter
.

Thanks to Justin Peters for the link.
Posted by Donald L. Luskin at 12:12 PM
link

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

Don,

We had run ins, as you call them, because, as with this post, you bollix facts.

1. I am not a New York Times reporter, as stated at the CJR website. I retired from the paper, but not from journalism, last April.

2. I am not "furious" at anyone. CJR's mission is to improve the press and for almost 40 years I have been critiquing the press and examining journalism issues.

There's no emotion here, only facts, history, analysis and some musing (in the hope it will provoke deep thought by others).