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- <text id=89TT0285>
- <title>
- Jan. 30, 1989: Covering The Bush White House
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1989
- Jan. 30, 1989 The Bush Era Begins
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- PRESS, Page 54
- Covering the Bush White House
- </hdr><body>
- <p>After a stage-managed era, reporters hope for openness
- </p>
- <p>By Laurence Zuckerman
- </p>
- <p> As George Bush took the oath of office last week, another,
- less heralded transition was quietly taking place in news
- bureaus throughout the capital. ABC News correspondent Sam
- Donaldson, who became the embodiment of the White House press
- corps during the Reagan era, stepped aside after twelve years on
- the beat to co-anchor a new ABC prime-time news hour due later
- this year. The Washington Post's Lou Cannon, who started
- covering Reagan in his early days in California, began a leave
- of absence to write a book about the Reagan presidency.
- </p>
- <p> Like the incoming Bush Cabinet, the new White House press
- corps has many familiar faces. Lesley Stahl, who covered
- Reagan's first term for CBS News, is returning. So are veteran
- Reagan watchers for ABC, NBC, CNN, the New York Times, Wall
- Street Journal, Los Angeles Times and Boston Globe. Yet White
- House reporters old and new take up their posts at a time when
- the beat, though still one of journalism's most prestigious,
- has lost some of its luster after eight years of obsessive news
- management by the Reagan Administration. "Like the peso, it's
- been devalued," admits Boston Globe reporter Walter Robinson,
- who saw two colleagues pass up offers to move to Washington to
- cover Bush. Adds Wall Street Journal correspondent Michel
- McQueen, 29, one of the few reporters new to the White House
- assignment: "People have said, `Congratulations -- and
- condolences.' "
- </p>
- <p> Covering the White House has always been a difficult job.
- The competition is keen, and the sources are limited. Unlike
- Congressmen or even big-city mayors, who can be staked out and
- buttonholed by reporters, the President and his top aides are
- carefully protected by elaborate security measures and protocol.
- Journalists who push too hard risk getting frozen out.
- "Generally the best, most aggressive reporting does not come
- from White House reporters, because they have to maintain their
- good relations," says Knight-Ridder correspondent Owen Ullmann.
- </p>
- <p> Still, the White House is considered a plum assignment,
- especially in television, because almost anything the President
- does or says makes the front page and tops the evening news.
- Exploiting this seemingly insatiable appetite for presidential
- news was one of the Reagan Administration's key contributions to
- the long history of White House press manipulation. By placing
- the President in attractive settings -- meeting foreign heads
- of state or splitting wood at his California ranch -- the White
- House p.r. apparatchiks provided the networks with the daily
- supply of visuals they desired, while cultivating the image of
- an active and accessible leader. In reality, Reagan was
- carefully cloistered from reporters, who could rarely do more
- than shout questions at him over the din of helicopter rotors.
- </p>
- <p> Bush promises to be different. Although he adopted the
- Reagan method during the campaign, stage-managing his every
- appearance and sequestering himself from the press, he held
- more news conferences in the ten weeks following the election
- than Reagan did in his last two years in office. "I think you
- will see him act as President very much as he has been in the
- last few weeks," says White House spokesman Marlin Fitzwater.
- </p>
- <p> After the frustrations of the Reagan years, the new White
- House reporters seem enraptured by Bush, at least for now. "If
- you ask him a question, he'll stop and answer it," gushes Janet
- Cawley of the Chicago Tribune. While Reagan rarely broke from
- his precise daily schedule, Bush seems to be cultivating the
- image of a "spontaneous" citizen-President, impulsively heading
- out on the town for a Chinese dinner or a movie.
- </p>
- <p> Even during the transition period, however, there were signs
- that Bush might not be so open when it counts. On Jan. 5, the
- day after U.S. F-14s shot down two Libyan jets, a Bush speech
- to a veterans' group that was supposed to be covered by a pool
- of reporters was closed to the press, apparently to shield Bush
- from questions about the dogfight. (The Vice President's office
- claims that the event was never officially designated for press
- coverage.) The incident recalls the protective instincts of the
- Bush campaign's image handlers, many of whom will have the same
- roles in the White House.
- </p>
- <p> Surprisingly, few in the new White House press corps seem to
- have considered how they may combat Reagan-style manipulation in
- the future. "There is nothing the press can do if Bush is as
- popular as Reagan was," says Lesley Stahl. Not true. For one
- thing, editors and producers can fight the compulsion to define
- everything the President does as news.
- </p>
- <p> They can also act on a principle that is agreed upon by news
- executives at every symposium about the press and the
- presidency: that the White House is in many ways the worst
- place to cover the Executive Branch. By redeploying some of the
- vast resources spent on the "body watch," news organizations
- could more actively probe the dozens of federal agencies that
- actually make up the Administration and carry out most of its
- work. That would help free reporters from their dependence on
- handouts from the White House. For as United Press International
- correspondent Helen Thomas, a 28-year White House veteran,
- rightly points out, "All new Presidents promise to be more open,
- but eventually the door closes, and the penchant for secrecy
- grows."
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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