White House press corps
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The White House Press Corps is the group of journalists or correspondents usually stationed at the White House in Washington, D.C. to cover the president of the United States, White House events and news briefings. Their offices are located in the West Wing.
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[edit] Overview
The White House Press Secretary or a deputy generally holds a weekday news briefing, which takes place in the James S. Brady Press Briefing Room. The room currently seats 49 reporters. Each seat is assigned to one news gathering organization, with the most prominent occupying the first two rows. Reporters who don't have an assigned seat may stand. Often a smaller group of reporters known as the White House press pool is assembled to report back to their colleagues on events where the venue would make open coverage logistically difficult.
When a new U.S. president is elected, some news organizations change their correspondents, most often to the reporter who had been assigned to cover the new president during the preceding campaign. For example, after the 2008 presidential campaign, ABC News moved Jake Tapper, who had covered Barack Obama during his presidential campaign, to the White House correspondent's position.
Some White House correspondents have come under criticism for not challenging the people they cover more directly and thereby shirking their Fourth Estate responsibility. A common criticism of the White House is that the top reporters are given priority access to the Press Secretary and are allowed follow-up questions, while those in the back rows are rarely called on.
[edit] Current White House correspondents
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[edit] Television
- Jake Tapper of ABC News
- Yunji de Nies of ABC News
- Chuck Todd of NBC News
- Rob Reynolds of Al Jazeera English
- Julianna Goldman of Bloomberg Television
- Norah O'Donnell of CBS News
- Bill Plante of CBS News
- Chip Reid of CBS News
- David Brody of Christian Broadcasting Network
- Melissa Charbonneau of Christian Broadcasting Network
- Suzanne Malveaux of CNN
- Dan Lothian of CNN
- Jessica Yellin of CNN
- Brianna Keilar of CNN
- Ed Henry of Fox News
- Wendell Goler of Fox News
- Casey Cronkhite of Phi Gamma Delta - Mu Deuteron
[edit] Print and Internet
- Carol Lee of The Wall Street Journal
- Laura Meckler of The Wall Street Journal
- Mike Allen of Politico
- Marc Ambinder of National Journal
- Charles Babington of Associated Press
- Peter Baker of the New York Times
- Ken Bazinet of the New York Daily News
- Caren Bohan of Reuters
- Tommy Christopher of Mediaite
- Helene Cooper of the New York Times
- David Corn of Mother Jones
- John Gizzi of Human Events
- Lester Kinsolving of WorldNetDaily
- Olivier Knox of Yahoo! News
- Jennifer Loven of Associated Press
- Christi Parsons of the Chicago Tribune
- Sean Quinn of FiveThirtyEight.com
- Linda Feldman Christian Science Monitor
- Sam Stein of The Huffington Post
- Jon Ward of The Daily Caller [1]
- Christina Bellantoni of Talking Points Memo [1]
- Steven Thomma of McClatchy
- Richard Wolffe of Newsweek
- Dave Boyer of the Washington Times
[edit] Radio
- Ann Compton of ABC News Radio
- Scott Horsley of NPR
- Don Gonyea of National Public Radio
- Mark Knoller of CBS News
- Connie Lawn of USA Radio Network (senior correspondent)
- Peter Maer of CBS News
- April Ryan of American Urban Radio Networks
- Jelani D. Hilliard Jackson of The Progressive Talk Radio Network
[edit] Press Room
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[edit] Former White House correspondents
- Jim Angle for National Public Radio
- Bret Baier
- Wolf Blitzer for the Jerusalem Post
- Rita Braver
- Tom Brokaw
- David Broder of The Washington Post
- Campbell Brown for NBC News
- Lou Cannon for the Washington Post
- Carl Cameron
- Steve Daley for the Chicago Tribune
- Ann Devroy for the Gannett Company and USA Today, and The Washington Post
- John Dickerson for Time
- Sam Donaldson
- John Donvan
- James Deakin for the St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Mike Emanuel
- Trude Feldman
- Major Garrett for Fox News
- David Gregory
- Savannah Guthrie of NBC News
- Brit Hume for ABC News
- Gwen Ifill for the New York Times
- John King
- Greg Kelly for Fox News
- Mara Liasson
- Jane Mayer for the Wall Street Journal
- Sarah McClendon
- Andrea Mitchell
- Terry Moran
- Sophia A. Nelson for Jet Magazine
- Martha Raddatz
- John D. Roberts for CBS News
- Scott Pelley
- Dan Rather
- Bill Sammon for the Washington Times and Washington Examiner
- Hugh Sidey for Time
- Helen Thomas for Hearst Newspapers and United Press International
- Bob Thompson for Hearst Newspapers
- Chris Wallace for NBC News
- Brian Williams
- Juan Williams for the Washington Post
- Judy Woodruff for NBC News
- Byron York for National Review
- David E Harshbarger (1972) was the youngest member of the White House press corps.[citation needed]
[edit] See also
[edit] References
- ^ a b Calderone, Michael (2010-02-01). "Daily Caller joins W.H. pool". Politico.Com. http://www.politico.com/blogs/michaelcalderone/0210/Daily_Caller_joins_WH_pool.html. Retrieved 2011-07-20.
[edit] External links
- 2008 List of White House Correspondents, Washington Post
- Obama administration press briefings at the White House's YouTube channel
- Papers of John L. Steele, White House correspondent, 1955-1958, Dwight D. Eisenhower Presidential Library (PDF)
- White House Correspondents' Association official website
- White House press pool reports