President Joe Biden readies for first news conference, White House tradition

WASHINGTON: He’d led allied armies in the defeat of Nazi Germany only to find himself, a decade later, a tad intimidated before the cameras in an echoey room of the Old Executive Office Building, ready to make history again.

“Well, I see we’re trying a new experiment this morning,” President Dwight Eisenhower told the press corps.

“I hope that doesn’t prove to be a disturbing influence.”

It was the first presidential news conference captured for broadcast by television.

In the scratchy black and white of 1955 TV sets, Americans saw those trademark Ike grins and heard him beef about being asked a “loaded question.”

With that, an enlightening, contentious and often showboating tradition came into the modern age, one President Joe Biden carries on Thursday with his first White House news conference.

Stay tuned for any disturbing influences.

Depending how you count, Biden is a little or a lot behind his recent predecessors in opening himself to questions in what historian Martha Joynt Kumar calls the “high-risk, high-reward” enterprise of presidential news conferences.

The last four presidents, back to Bill Clinton, each held one solo White House news conference in their first 60 days, picking up the pace to varying degrees later.

Adding in the joint, often very brief news conferences with visiting foreign leaders, Donald Trump held at least five news conferences by that point, Clinton at least four, and Barack Obama two.

The pandemic has kept foreign leaders away from the White House this year.

The Biden White House is a notably tight ship, fully aware of his history of flubs, as is Biden himself, a self-described “gaffe machine.”

He went through the 2020 campaign with infrequent news conferences and often hunkered down in the pandemic.

Yet he debated fellow Democrats a dozen times and Trump three times without apparent harm to his prospects or the country.

In one of the president’s few extended and open-ended sessions with the media before Thursday, an interview with ABC News, Americans gained insight into his thinking about Russian President Vladimir Putin — Biden called him a killer who “will pay a price” for U.S. election interference — as well as the surge of young migrants at the border, a possibly delayed troop withdrawal from Afghanistan, and more.

Eisenhower’s news conference January 19, 1955, was one benchmark among several in the history of presidential news conferences tracked by Kumar, an authority on White House practices.

Until his administration, the news conferences were off the record, meaning presidents gave the public information about the country’s affairs and the workings of government without necessarily letting their name be used.

Woodrow Wilson gave the first presidential news conference in 1913.

Calvin Coolidge made a habit of them, holding nearly 73 a year on average, explaining “the people should have a fairly accurate report of what the president is trying to do.”

Franklin Roosevelt, a radio pioneer who mastered communications on all fronts and nearly matched Coolidge’s unrivaled pace of news conferences, regularly summoned his favoured reporters to his office, consigning the ones he didn’t like to his “dunce club.”

Off the record often meant giving the president a chance to clean up his remarks, unheard of today.

At a March 1950 news conference, Harry Truman declared that Sen.

Joseph McCarthy, the audacious canceler of communists real and imagined in U.S. government and society, was the Kremlin’s “best asset.”

“When one of the reporters commented that the president’s observation would hit page one tomorrow,’ Truman realized he had better soften the statement,” Kumar writes.

‘He worked’ with reporters and allowed the following as a direct quotation: The greatest asset that the Kremlin has is the partisan attempt in the Senate to sabotage the bipartisan foreign policy of the United States.’

Such manipulation became untenable when Eisenhower put the news conferences on the record and let broadcasters record them.

Even so, segments were only televised later.

Although wanting to take advantage of the nascent medium of TV, Eisenhower did so with a partial step.

Press secretary James C. Hagerty told AP at the time that live telecasts would not be allowed.

It was John F. Kennedy who ushered in the age of live, televised news conferences, and he thrived in the practice.

Smooth-talking, authoritative and funny, Kennedy reached living rooms about twice a month with his news conferences.

But for all of JFK’s charms and smarts, he encountered a more aggressive White House press corps, Kumar says.

In part that was because the previous administration had been caught in a lie, at first telling Americans the Soviets had shot down a U.S.weather plane when it was a spy plane.

Even so, open secrets about Kennedy’s behaviour with women and his health problems stayed off-limits in the coverage.

Through the cascade of lies about Vietnam and Watergate, the adversarial relationship between the press and power took deeper root.

So did the performative nature of the exercise, with the cameras watching.


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