Early in Ms. McEnany’s tenure, she was praised by conservative news media for her attacks on the mainstream press. But since then, she has so far struggled to make the briefings compelling enough — or credible enough — to refocus the attention on what the administration hopes to highlight instead of the pandemic. She recently resorted to playing a video of protesters in Portland, Ore., that she accused the news media of ignoring. The video contained explicit language, causing Fox News, which faithfully airs the briefings, to cut away.
“We were not expecting that video, and our management here at Fox News has decided we will cut away at this time,” the host, Harris Faulkner, said.
Ms. McEnany is hardly the first Trump press secretary to criticize the news media, or to say things from the podium that are untrue.
Sean Spicer, the first to hold the job under Mr. Trump, started out by trying to persuade incredulous reporters and the nation that the Inauguration Day crowd size set an attendance record. (It didn’t.) Sarah Huckabee Sanders refused to disavow Mr. Trump’s claim that journalists were the enemies of the people. And Ms. Grisham, who never held a briefing, preferred using Twitter to call out journalists by name.
But for all that, Ms. McEnany’s predecessors also understood the value in working with reporters, even when it was not something Mr. Trump encouraged.
Jonathan Karl of ABC News, the former president of the White House Correspondents’ Association, criticized Ms. McEnany’s tendency to fill the press briefings with “head-spinning contradictions” and her lack of interest in clarifying Mr. Trump’s decisions, particularly on matters of race.
“The White House press secretary serves at the pleasure of a president but is also a public servant whose salary is paid by taxpayers,” Mr. Karl wrote in a Washington Post op-ed in July. “Denying reality and using the White House podium for purely political purposes is a violation of public trust.”