- Kathleen Parker
- Opinion Writer
Why the ‘threat’ on Bob Woodward matters
This would be an oversight.
It also may not mean much that the White House press corps got
teed off when they weren’t allowed access to President Obama as he
played golf with Tiger Woods. This, too, would be an oversight.
Though
not comparable — one appeared to be a veiled threat aimed at one of the
nation’s most respected journalists and the other a minor blip in the
scheme of things — both are part of a pattern of behavior by the Obama
administration that suggests not just thin skin but a disregard for the
role of the press and a gradual slide toward a state media.
This is where oversight can become dangerous.
Understandably,
everyday Americans may find this discussion too inside baseball to pay
much mind. Why can’t the president play a little golf without a press
gaggle watching? As for Woodward, it’s not as though the White House was
threatening to bust his kneecaps.
Add to these likely sentiments
the fact that Americans increasingly dislike the so-called mainstream
media, sometimes for good reason. Distrust of media, encouraged by
alternative media seeking to enhance their own standing, has become a
tool useful to the very powers the Fourth Estate was constitutionally
endowed to monitor. When the president can bypass reporters to reach the
public, it is not far-fetched to imagine a time — perhaps now? — when
the state controls the message.
To recap: Woodward recently wrote a commentary
for The Post that placed the sequester debacle on Obama’s desk and
accused the president of “moving the goal posts” by asking for more tax
increases.
Before his piece was published, Woodward called the
White House to tell officials it was coming. A shouting match ensued
between Woodward and Gene Sperling, Obama’s economic adviser, followed
by an e-mail in which Sperling said that Woodward “will regret staking
out that claim.”
Though the tone was conciliatory and Sperling
apologized for raising his voice, the message nonetheless caused
Woodward to bristle.
Again, Woodward’s kneecaps are probably
safe, but the challenge to his facts, and therefore to his character,
was unusual, given Woodward’s stature. And, how, by the way, might
Woodward come to regret it? Sperling’s words, though measured, could be
read as: “You’ll never set foot in this White House again.”
When
reporters lose access to the White House, it isn’t about being invited
to the annual holiday party. It’s about having access to the most
powerful people on the planet as they execute the nation’s business.
Inarguably,
Woodward has had greater access to the White House than any other
journalist in town. Also inarguably, he would survive without it. He has
filled a library shelf with books about the inner workings of this and
other administrations, the fact of which makes current events so
remarkable.
Woodward, almost 70, is Washington’s Reporter
Emeritus. His facts stand up to scrutiny. His motivations withstand the
test of objectivity. Sperling obviously assumed that Woodward wouldn’t
take offense at the suggestion that he not only was wrong but was also
endangering his valuable proximity to power.
He assumed, in other words, that Woodward would not do his job. This was an oversight.
This
is no tempest in a teapot but rather the leak in the dike. Drip by
drip, the Obama administration has demonstrated its intolerance for
dissent and its contempt for any who stray from the White House script.
Yes, all administrations are sensitive to criticism, and all push back
when such criticism is deemed unfair or inaccurate. But no president
since Richard Nixon has demonstrated such overt contempt for the
messenger. And, thanks to technological advances in social media, Obama
has been able to bypass traditional watchdogs as no other president has.
More to the point, the Obama White House is, to put it politely,
fudging as it tries to place the onus of the sequester on Congress.
And, as has become customary, officials are using the Woodward spat to
distract attention. As Woodward put it: “This is the old trick . . . of making the press . . . the issue, rather than what the White House has done here.”
Killing
the messenger is a time-honored method of controlling the message, but
we have already spilled that blood. And the First Amendment’s protection
of a free press, the purpose of which is to check power and constrain
government’s ability to dictate the lives of private citizens, was no
accident.
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