Categories: The Current Situation

Ana Marie Cox: Why We Should Get Rid of the White House Press Corps

The founding editor of the what’s-up-inside-the-Beltway blog Wonkette makes the suggestion in The Washington Post:

Name a major political story broken by a White House correspondent. A thorough debunking of the Bush case for Iraqi WMD? McClatchy Newspapers’ State Department and national security correspondents. Bush’s abuse of signing statements? The Boston Globe’s legal affairs correspondent. Even Watergate came off The Washington Post’s Metro desk.

Here are some stories that reporters working the White House beat have produced in the past few months: Pocket squares are back! The president is popular in Europe. Vegetable garden! Joe Biden occasionally says things he probably regrets. Puppy!

It’s not that the reporters covering the president are bad at their jobs. Most are experienced journalists at the top of their game — and they’re wasted at the White House, where scoops are doled out, not uncovered. The day of a typical White House correspondent consists, literally, of waiting to be told things. Legitimate security concerns and a tightly scripted political world keep the presidential press corps physically corralled and informationally hostage.

Joey deVilla

Share
Published by
Joey deVilla

Recent Posts

Palm trees and a puffy vest

My friends in my old home town, Toronto, won’t find Tampa’s current temperatures cold, but…

23 hours ago

“You had me at ‘grenade’” / “Show me the MAC-10!”

Clearly, I missed out by not watching the director’s cut of Jerry Maguire! But seriously —…

3 days ago

Same energy

4 days ago

MLK Day

Amidst all the noise of an incoming government that stands against everything he stood for,…

4 days ago

Florida Governor DeSantis’ latest attempt to enshittify higher education, starring Scott Yenor

One of the guys — and I do mean guys — who’s bound and determined…

5 days ago