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Journalists would set their own rules, CJR editor tells Trump

The editor-in-chief of the journalism-monitoring magazine said the media has some ground rules for engaging with the President.

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WASHINGTON: Days ahead of his inauguration as US President, the American Press Corps today made it clear to Donald Trump that he cannot "dictate" to them and that "we, not you, decide how best to serve our readers, listeners, and viewers."

"In these final days before your inauguration, we thought it might be helpful to clarify how we see the relationship between your administration and the American Press Corps," Kyle Pope, editor-in-chief and publisher of the Columbia Journalism Review, said in an open letter to Trump.

In the op-ed 'An open letter to Trump from the US press corps' published today in CJR, Pope says that the relationship between the media and the President-elect are strained.

"Reports over the last few days that your press secretary is considering pulling news media offices out of the White House are the latest in a pattern of behaviour that has persisted throughout the campaign: You’ve banned news organisations from covering you," he said.

Pope insists that while Trump is within his rights to decide his ground rules for engaging with the press, the media too has some.

"It is, after all, our airtime and column inches that you are seeking to influence. We, not you, decide how best to serve our readers, listeners, and viewers. So think of what follows as a backgrounder on what to expect from us over the next four years," he wrote on behalf of American journalists.

In an eight point charter, Pope told Trump he might decide that giving reporters access to his administration has no upside.

"We think that would be a mistake on your part, but again, it's your choice. We are very good at finding alternative ways to get information; indeed, some of the best reporting during the campaign came from news organisations that were banned from your rallies," he said.

"We may agree to speak to some of your officials off the record, or we may not. We may attend background briefings or off-the-record social events, or we may skip them. That's our choice. If you think reporters who don't agree to the rules, and are shut out, won’t get the story, see above," he said.

He said that it is the media which will decide how much airtime to give to his spokespeople and surrogates.

The American media believes that there is an objective truth, and it will hold him to that, he cautioned Trump.

"We'll obsess over the details of government. You and your staff sit in the White House, but the American government is a sprawling thing. We will fan reporters out across the government, embed them in your agencies, source up those bureaucrats. The result will be that while you may seek to control what comes out of the West Wing, we'll have the upper hand in covering how your policies are carried out," he wrote.
 

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