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The
President and the Press ~ FDR's First Press Conference:
March 1933
Introduction
As the only single official elected by all citizens, the
American president, in effect, represents us all –
both at home and around the globe. What the president
believes is the best course for our nation, and how we
navigate that course, has always been vital knowledge
to those who are engaged in the political process. Most
often, the president has expressed these ideals through
the press. Of course, 19th-century presidents all wished
for – and to an extent were able to create –
positive newspaper coverage. Andrew Jackson went as far
as to offer journalists positions in the federal government
as an enticement to paint a rosy picture of his administration.
But the 20th century brought committed efforts by presidents
to utilize the media to forward their programs and to
gather public support. The way in which a White House
has communicated, and the degree to which it has succeeded,
directly impacts our ability to study the role of leadership
in the American past. Press conferences are an important
source for historical researchers because they lead to
media interpretations of the chief executive, in addition
to the words uttered by the president himself, which feed
our understanding of his role in history.
Topic of Analysis
At a traditional Thanksgiving ceremony, the president
of the United States exercises his authority by granting
a pardon to a turkey at the White House. In 2002, President
George W. Bush stood in the Rose Garden and commented
on the skittish bird whose fate had yet to be determined:
“He looks a little nervous, doesn’t he? He
probably thinks he’s going to have a press conference.”
A modern presidential press conference can certainly put
a chief executive in the hot seat, as he opens himself
to tough questions from the media as the world watches.
In such a circumstance a president is most vulnerable,
but at the same time he has an enormous opportunity to
present his most important messages and portray his leadership
style. As political scientist Martha Joynt Kumar states,
there are “no off -the-record remarks, no statements
made on background, or speeches to a limited audience.
The presidency today is on the record and broadcast live
to audiences around the world.”1
This was not always so. Woodrow Wilson held the first
formal presidential press conference in 1913 and saw it
as a vehicle for uniting public opinion behind his programs.
He hoped the press would be his partner (not adversary)
in this endeavor. He also thought that the press from
around the nation might channel the concerns of their
readers to the White House. Wilson would not agree to
be quoted, he spoke off the record, and only reporters
were allowed in the room.
This was, more or less, standard procedure in the 20th
century until technologies forced adaptations. Televised
press conferences, introduced in Dwight D. Eisenhower’s
tenure, ousted off-the-record remarks while enhanced transportation
put the press conference on the road. Furthermore, especially
in recent times, the president has expanded the opportunities
to be seen, but, as always, he has sought to control his
message. Recent trends show that presidents do fewer solo
press conferences but offer up instead more joint press
conferences when the president appears before the media
with the leader of another nation or other official. Fewer
questions are allowed in joint sessions and, if held in
the Oval Office, fewer reporters are allowed to participate
because of the confining space. There are also many informal
“exchanges” when reporters can attempt to
call out questions, for example, when the president is
walking across the White House lawn to board the helicopter,
Marine One.
Today, “presidential press conference” brings
to mind a prime time televised Q &A in the elegant
White House East Room, most often in response to a crisis
situation. In fact, such events are relatively rare compared
to the many other opportunities and venues available to
the president. Calvin Coolidge once spent several months
in the Adirondack Mountains, and held sessions there.
Herbert Hoover received questions submitted by the press
in advance. He selected only those which he was interested
in answering. Many times Hoover would only make remarks
and not answer questions at all. Harry Truman moved press
conferences from the Oval Office, to the White House Theater,
to the Indian Treaty Room in the Executive Office Building
adjacent to the White House. John F. Kennedy liked the
large State Department Auditorium, a number of blocks
away. Lyndon Johnson used a dozen different locations
for press conferences in the first six months of his presidency,
including his Texas ranch.
Analysis
While
a former aide wryly noted that if Lyndon Johnson “had
three minutes with nothing to do, he called a press conference,”
Franklin D. Roosevelt had more press conferences –
1,023 – than any other chief executive. (Not-so-Silent
Calvin Coolidge is a distant second, hosting 521.) 2 In
his first press conference, March 8, 1933, FDR laid down
the ground rules to the assembled reporters. He hoped
to open a line of communication with the press that was
informal and informative, although not as publicly revealing
as modern press conferences, as students will see. Roosevelt
had previous experience with the press as assistant secretary
of the Navy and as governor of New York, as he notes.
His press secretary, Steve Early, accompanied him at this
and many other sessions. FDR’s conversational tone,
and his sense of humor, provided the atmosphere he hoped
would lead to a positive relationship with the press.
At the same time, it is clear that he wanted to control
the use of information emanating from the White House.
Ask
students to read the excerpt of FDR’s press conference
of March 8, 1933, held just four days after his
first inauguration. This excerpt accounts for just the
opening remarks. The president went on to discuss emergency
measures to combat the dire economic crisis that afflicted
the nation. The entire transcript – and the transcripts
of all FDR’s conferences – is found in Complete
Presidential Press Conferences of Franklin D. Roosevelt,
New York: Da Capo Press, 1972. Some transcripts can be
found online at:
http://www.fdrlibrary.marist.edu/index.html
In particular, students might be interested to know that
FDR’s Lend Lease program was first revealed in his
press conference of December 17, 1940. At this session,
FDR told the now-famous parable of lending your neighbor
a garden hose to put out his fire. Visit:
http://www.fdrlibrary.marist.edu/odllpc2.html
Concluding Questions
FDR is well-known for his fireside chats, those radio
messages that he used to connect with the American people
throughout the Depression and World War II. While informal
in tone, they were scripted readings. On the other hand,
his press conferences exposed him to inquisitors. It
would have been difficult to prepare for questions that
had not been conceived; however, FDR could simply say
he could not or did not want to answer, and citizens
would never know of these responses. Keeping in mind
FDR’s ground rules, how were American citizens
served, or hindered, by this process?
With live
television, presidents have found it difficult to say,
“I don’t know,” or “I choose
not to answer that question.” And few presidents
want to turn to an aide and ask them to provide the
answer. History shows that presidents tend to have fewer
press conferences as their time in the White House moves
forward. Why do you think this is the case? Would it
be better to go back to the days of FDR?
Consider
that many presidential aides now speak “off the
record,” in essence conveying a message from the
president. Are they simply replacing the FDR model?
Discuss
the balance between the need for a president to reveal
his ideas to American citizens through the press and
journalists’ obligations to objectively report
the news.
1.
Martha Joynt Kumar, “The White House and the Press:
News Organizations as a Presidential Resource and as a
Source of Pressure,” Presidential Studies Quarterly
33, no.3 (September 2003): 669-670.
2. Kumar, “’Does This Constitute a Press Conference?’
Defining and Tabulating Modern Presidential Press Conferences,”
Presidential Studies Quarterly 33, no. 1 (March 2003):
228.
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Show:
The
Press and the White House
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