White House restricts US press access to Kim Jong Un summit
The White House restricted journalists’ access to parts of President Donald Trump’s summit with Kim Jong Un despite long-standing arrangements intended to ensure the public is kept fully abreast of key presidential moments. Under standard rules agreed to by the White House and the press corps, a full pool of reporters travels with the president at all times and is allowed at any meetings where press access in granted, even if space is limited. The group includes representatives from various forms of media — such as TV, print and photos — who then pool the information they gather with other news outlets that are unable to be present because of space. During the photo-op at the start of Trump’s one-on-one meeting with Kim, text reporters for newswires The Associated Press, Reuters and Bloomberg were kept out of the pool, as were the designated representatives for radio and the foreign press corps. Although a television cameraman and sound technician were allowed in, the TV networks’ editorial representative — responsible for relaying information to colleagues about what occurs or is said during the photo-op — was not. No independent journalists were allowed in for another photo-op at the start of a working lunch meeting involving President Trump, Kim and top aides. US journalists learned that the lunch was underway only when footage from inside was displayed on a video feed provided by summit host Singapore.
White House restricts US press access to Kim Jong Un summit