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White House bans four journalists from covering Trump-Kim dinner because of shouted questions - The Washington Post

President Trump disregarded shouted questions about his former lawyer Michael Cohen and North Korea’s denuclearization efforts at the end of his remarks with Kim Jong Un on Feb. 27, and the White House later banned four U.S. journalists from covering the leaders’ dinner following the incident. </caption>

HANOI — The White House abruptly banned four U.S. journalists from covering President Trump’s dinner here Wednesday with North Korean dictator Kim Jong Un after some of them shouted questions at the leaders during their earlier meetings.

Reporters from the Associated Press, Bloomberg News, the Los Angeles Times and Reuters were excluded from covering the dinner because of what White House press secretary Sarah Sanders said were “sensitivities over shouted questions in the previous sprays.” Among the questions asked of Trump was one about the congressional testimony of his former lawyer Michael Cohen.

The White House’s move to restrict press access was an extraordinary act of retaliation by the U.S. government, which historically has upheld the rights of journalists while a president travels overseas. It was especially remarkable because it came during Trump’s meeting with the leader of a totalitarian state that does not have a free press.

Trump’s exchanges with Kim were being covered by the standard 13-member traveling White House press pool, but ahead of the dinner Sanders sought to exclude all reporters from the pool and permit only the photographers and television crew, citing “sensitivities over shouted questions in the previous sprays.”

After loud pushback, including from photojournalists who protested, Sanders allowed a single reporter in the pool for the dinner: Vivian Salama of the Wall Street Journal, who was serving as the print pooler and did not ask a question at the dinner. In addition, at least two members of the North Korean media contingent, a photographer and cameraman, were seen covering the dinner.

Reporters for the three wire services, as well as a second print pooler, were excluded. They included two journalists who had asked Trump questions in the earlier appearances: Jonathan Lemire of the AP and Jeff Mason of Reuters. Also excluded were Justin Sink of Bloomberg and Eli Stokols of the Los Angeles Times.

In a statement, Sanders said: “Due to the sensitive nature of the meetings we have limited the pool for the dinner to a smaller group, but ensured that representation of photographers, TV, radio and print Poolers are all in the room. We are continuing to negotiate aspects of this historic summit and will always work to make sure the U.S. media has as much access as possible.”

Saul Loeb

AFP/Getty Images

President Donald Trump and North Korea's leader Kim Jong Un sit down for a dinner at the Sofitel Legend Metropole hotel in Hanoi.

Sanders did not specify whether the White House was retaliating against journalists who asked questions at the request of Trump or of Kim or the North Korean delegation. Asked by The Washington Post to clarify, Sanders referred to her written statement.

Journalists in the pool asked Sanders repeatedly whether North Korea was responsible for the White House’s decision to curb access, but she declined to give a direct answer. “I wouldn’t say that,” she said, according to two people present for the discussions.

Lauren Easton, a spokeswoman for the AP, said in a statement: “The Associated Press decries such efforts by the White House to restrict access to the president. It is critically important that any president uphold American press freedom standards, not only at home but especially while abroad.”

The move came a day after the U.S. press corps was kicked out of its filing center in Hanoi at the request of the North Korean entourage. The White House booked conference facilities at the Melia hotel as a press workspace, which was being paid for by news organizations, but the hotel in the heart of the city also happened to be where Kim and his delegation decided to stay. As Kim’s motorcade headed toward Hanoi on Tuesday, Vietnamese officials suddenly booted the U.S. media from the hotel and relocated their operations at a separate site sharing space with the international press corps.

[In Hanoi, Kim Jong Un and a culture clash with the White House press corps]

During Trump’s first visit with Kim on Wednesday night, American reporters asked Trump four questions during two brief photo opportunities; they asked Kim none. Eight North Korean reporters were also present for the summit — the entirely male contingent wore pins celebrating Kim Jong Un and were dressed alike — but they asked no questions.

When Trump and Kim first shook hands, Mason asked whether Trump had walked back his vow to denuclearize the Korean Peninsula. “No,” the president replied. And Lemire asked whether he would declare an end to the Korean War, to which Trump replied, “We’ll see.”

A few minutes later, when Trump and Kim sat down for their one-on-one meeting, Lemire asked Trump whether he had a response to Cohen’s testimony. Trump shook his head and did not answer.

Evan Vucci

AP

President Donald Trump meets North Korean leader Kim Jong Un on Wednesday.

Trump has long complained about reporters asking him questions at photo opportunities, especially when he is in the presence of foreign leaders, which aides have said he views as disrespectful and lacking in decorum. Trump has called the mainstream media “the enemy of the people,” and the White House occasionally has punished reporters for their questioning, including CNN’s Jim Acosta and Kaitlan Collins.

This was not the first time Lemire and Mason asked uncomfortable questions of Trump on foreign soil. Both posed sharp questions to the president at his 2018 Helsinki news conference alongside Russian President Vladi­mir Putin. Trump later complained to aides about their questions, although he has since granted interviews to both reporters.

At Wednesday’s dinner with Kim, Trump made small talk with the press pool. “Everybody having a great time?” he asked.

After his press secretary kicked four reporters out of the pool, Trump joked to Kim that the “media make us look very good!” The president also pointed to photojournalist Doug Mills of the New York Times and told Kim he was “one of the great photographers of the world.”

Past administrations have struggled to balance access for U.S. reporters as presidents have met with authoritarian regimes, including China, which have sought to limit the number of reporters in the room. When President Barack Obama met with Chinese Vice Premier Wen Jiabao on the sidelines of a regional summit in Bali in 2011, the White House barred wire service and a newspaper reporter from the photo op, allowing in only news photographers. That drew protests on the spot from the press pool, including a Washington Post reporter.

In 2009, when Obama made his first visit to Beijing, he held a news conference with Chinese President Hu Jintao at which reporters from both countries were not allowed to ask questions. During a trip by then-Vice President Joseph Biden to Beijing in 2011, U.S. reporters were ushered out of a meeting by Chinese security officials as Biden was still making his opening remarks, leading to a scuffle.

David Nakamura in Hanoi contributed to this report.

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