I posted earlier today in Leaks, Damn Leaks and Distractions, that the White House had already tried to turn the issues of leaks against the press and might start deliberately leaking untrue information to counter the stream of whistleblower leaks currently coming out of the Administration. This afternoon, another tactic of using (real) leaks to delegitimize the press was used, as detailed in this story from the Huffington Post about the memo on using the National Guard as de facto immigration officers.
The
White House and Department of Homeland Security failed to respond to
the AP’s requests for comment prior to publication, the news
organization noted. But immediately after the AP published its explosive story, the White House and DHS denied it.
“Not true,” Michael Short, a senior assistant to White House Press Secretary Sean Spicer, tweeted at 10:26 a.m. A DHS spokeswoman said it was “not true” 10 minutes later.
White
House Press Secretary Sean Spicer told reporters aboard Air Force One
that the AP report was “100 percent not true,” according to a pool
report distributed to reporters at 10:40 a.m.
“I wish you guys had asked before you tweeted,” Spicer told reporters.
An AP reporter responded that the news organization had sought comment “multiple times before publication,” according to the pool report.
At 10:43 a.m., Spicer himself tweeted that the AP story was “not
true” and that “DHS confirms it is 100% false.” He responded similarly
to another reporter asking about it two minutes later.
A Cox Media Group producer tweeted at 11:03 a.m. that a DHS official said the memo cited by the AP was “a very early” draft and “was never seriously considered.”
The
White House and DHS could’ve clarified that the draft wasn’t being
seriously considered by the administration prior to publication, as journalists noted on Twitter.
The administration’s failure to respond left people to speculate about its motives.
Arizona
State journalism professor Dan Gilmor also questioned the
administration’s complete denial of the contents of the document, since
the document does exist.
Journalists
have complained recently that the Trump administration, which
frequently decries “fake news,” often fails to respond to requests for
comment that would allow reporters to include the administration’s
perspective or denials in the original story.
When
Trump claimed at Thursday’s press conference that journalists don’t
call before publishing stories, New York Times reporter Maggie Haberman responded that she doesn’t get her “emails returned from Spicer or [deputy press secretary Sarah Huckabee] Sanders, but I reach out.”
Her Times colleague, Glenn Thrush, echoed that sentiment in response to Trump’s claims.
“We call and email the White House all the time,” he tweeted. “They often don’t answer.”
While the White House has been amateurish in many things, its hard to believe that these tactics are not deliberate.
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