by Peter Wehner
In his State of
the Union address last night, President Obama spent much of the early
part of his speech savaging the idea of sequestration. In his typically
understated way, Mr. Obama referred to the sequester cuts as “sudden,
harsh, and arbitrary.” In case he wasn’t clear, Obama also referred to
them as “reckless.” And just in case this indictment was too vague, the
president said the sequester was a “really bad idea.”
Which makes this interview between
Fox News’ Bret Baier and White House press secretary Jay Carney so
delicious. Under Baier’s firm, skillful questioning, Carney is forced to
admit that yes, that really bad, terrible, awful, reckless, harsh,
vicious, offense-against-God-and-Man idea was … the president’s.
How terribly inconvenient for Mr. Carney.
What is also worth noting isn’t simply the admission by Carney, but his petulance. The former-Time-journalist-turned-Obama-mouthpiece is clearly very unhappy to be pressed on this matter. Because Mr. Carney, like the president, seems to believe that tough, direct, and respectful questions are a violation of journalist ethics in the age of Obama.
You can just imagine what’s going through Carney’s mind during the Baier interview: Where is Steve Kroft when you need him?
This of course explains why the White House, and the president in particular, has obsessed about Fox News and targeted it so often (full disclosure: I appear on Special Report w/ Bret Baier from time to time). Mr. Obama seems to believe that being cosseted by the press is a basic human right, at least when it comes to him. And given how he’s treated by so much of the press corps, I can understand why.
How terribly inconvenient for Mr. Carney.
What is also worth noting isn’t simply the admission by Carney, but his petulance. The former-Time-journalist-turned-Obama-mouthpiece is clearly very unhappy to be pressed on this matter. Because Mr. Carney, like the president, seems to believe that tough, direct, and respectful questions are a violation of journalist ethics in the age of Obama.
You can just imagine what’s going through Carney’s mind during the Baier interview: Where is Steve Kroft when you need him?
This of course explains why the White House, and the president in particular, has obsessed about Fox News and targeted it so often (full disclosure: I appear on Special Report w/ Bret Baier from time to time). Mr. Obama seems to believe that being cosseted by the press is a basic human right, at least when it comes to him. And given how he’s treated by so much of the press corps, I can understand why.
Peter Wehner
Source: http://www.commentarymagazine.com/2013/02/13/where-is-steve-kroft-when-you-need-him-sequester/
Copyright - Original materials copyright (c) by the authors.
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