Media Matters for America

Tumulty said it's "absurd" to attack U.S. press for not challenging Bush, while Froomkin praised U.K. press' "different tack"

December 08, 2006 5:43 pm ET

On December 8, Time magazine national political correspondent Karen Tumulty and washingtonpost.com columnist Dan Froomkin appeared to offer very different takes on questions from American and British reporters at the December 7 joint press conference with President Bush and British Prime Minister Tony Blair. In response to an email read on the December 8 edition of the National Public Radio-distributed Diane Rehm Show, in which the e-mailer mentioned a "very tough" question asked by a British reporter and wrote that it is "infuriating" that "[r]eporters in this country are still not taking this president to task about Iraq or any of his other botched policies," Tumulty said "the idea that the American press has not raised these questions is absurd." Tumulty added: "I don't think that, you know, one particular question in a press conference, where reporters tend to be asking to impress each other as much as anything else, is a measure of the entire American press corps." By contrast, in his December 8 column, Froomkin wrote: "Long live the British press!" He added: "American reporters dutifully but fruitlessly tried to get Bush to explain what he meant. Their colleagues from across the pond took a different tack."

The press conference was held to discuss the Iraq Study Group (ISG) report, which was released December 6. The report characterized the situation in Iraq as "grave and deteriorating." During the press conference, Bush and Blair called on six different reporters -- three American and three British -- for questions about the ISG report. BBC News political editor Nick Robinson said Bush's response to the report "won't convince many people [who believe] that you're still in denial about how bad things are in Iraq, and question your sincerity about changing course."

Below is a list of the questions asked by American reporters and British reporters at the December 7 press conference:

Questions from the American press:

Questions from the British press:

From the December 8 edition of WAMU's The Diane Rehm Show:

REHM: Welcome back to our Friday news roundup. And here is an email from Ellen, who says, "The first thing I said to myself when I heard a British reporter asking President Bush that very tough and obvious question about Iraq yesterday was, "Why doesn't a U.S. reporter ask it?' Reporters in this country are still not taking this president to task about Iraq or any of his other botched policies. I find it infuriating."

JOSEPH CURL (Washington Times White House correspondent): Well, one of the things that happens in press conferences is the -- usually what the president will do is take two questions from each side. So then you have almost always the AP and Reuters reporters asking the questions, and they are very strictly on policy. They are on minutia and moving things along. So both of them asked the same question yesterday -- the question about, you know, pulling out troops by 2008, talking with Iran and Syria. There were two questions on that. If she's referring to the --

REHM: No, she's referring --

CURL: -- she's referring to the question on denial. Whether President Bush is still in denial.

REHM: Exactly. Because he said -- I think Tony Blair was asked the question afterwards, but Bush's answer was very equivocal relating to the conclusion of the Baker report.

CURL: Well, but he was very stern, though. I mean, he, you know -- he made that flip little answer first, like, you know, "I know what's happening. Is that good enough?" But then to this reporter, he repeatedly jabbed his finger at him saying, "I know what's going on over there. I understand. I'm not in denial." So it's -- it was again -- you know -- U.S. reporters have asked this question many times, you know, "What do you blame yourself for? What are the biggest mistakes you've made?" This president doesn't do that. He's not a navel-gazer. He doesn't look in the mirror and think about these things or certainly admit them. So it's a question that really actually doesn't go anywhere. It has been asked and not answered.

TUMULTY: Well, and the idea that the American press has not raised these questions is absurd. I mean, there is right now a best-selling book written by one of the premier American reporters, Bob Woodward, called State of Denial. So I don't think that, you know, one particular question in a press conference, where reporters tend to be asking to impress each other as much as anything else, is a measure of the entire American press corps.

&mdash R.D. & B.J.L.

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