After more than 50 days in office, Biden has yet to hold a solo news conference, separating him from over a dozen of his most recent predecessors.
Though
the Biden delivered his first prime time address last week to speak
about the country’s progress in defeating the coronavirus pandemic, the
stretch of over seven weeks is the longest period a new president has
gone without meeting with the media in the last 100 years, the
Washington Post noted.
The White House has said Biden will hold a
news conference before April, but has not yet set a specific date.
Administration officials tried to justify his lengthy absence from the
podium by saying he regularly has been taking questions from reporters
in informal settings.
"Biden takes questions several times a week," White House press
secretary Jen Psaki told reporters last week. "[W]hich is an opportunity
for the people covering the White House to ask him about whatever news
is happening on any given day."
She added that the president has
been directing his "energy" and focus into getting Americans through the
pandemic by getting shots in their arms and passing the American Rescue
Plan.
Despite the unusual timing of his entry into the White
House, Biden has frustrated the White House Correspondents Association.
President Zeke Miller told Vanity Fair earlier
this month that news conferences were "critical to informing the
American people and holding an administration accountable."
The Washington Post Editorial Board also condemned the president saying "it’s past time for Biden to hold a news conference."
President Donald Trump,
whose administration was frequently criticized for its irregular
communication with the media, held his first news conference after just
one week from the start of his presidency.
Ronald
Reagan and Bill Clinton both formally met with the media nine days
after entering office, while Barack Obama waited for 20 days, the Post reported.
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