Portrait of a lame duck
Dana Milbank on the twilight of the Bush presidency: Eight months before the end of his second term, President Bush is forgotten but not gone. Power has shifted to Congress, attention has moved to the campaign trail, and the White House seems at times to be just going through the motions. For many reporters who ...
Dana Milbank on the twilight of the Bush presidency:
Dana Milbank on the twilight of the Bush presidency:
Eight months before the end of his second term, President Bush is forgotten but not gone. Power has shifted to Congress, attention has moved to the campaign trail, and the White House seems at times to be just going through the motions. For many reporters who remain on the White House beat, it has become a time to phone it in — literally.
Four minutes after the scheduled start time for yesterday’s White House briefing, only 14 of the 49 seats were occupied — and the 14 included flamboyant radio host Lester Kinsolving, who sat in the Bloomberg News seat; Raghubir Goyal of an obscure Indian American publication, who occupied the New York Times chair; and a foreign journalist in the back row, perusing the White House’s Cinco de Mayo dinner menu. Though attendance eventually swelled to 28, many of the nation’s leading news outlets left their chairs empty, among them National Public Radio, the Washington Times, the New York Daily News, the Dallas Morning News, the Houston Chronicle, the Boston Globe, the Baltimore Sun, the Chicago Tribune and the Politico.
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