PDA

View Full Version : FEMA Apologizes After Sham News Conference




IJ Reilly
Oct 26, 2007, 08:21 PM
White House, Homeland Security Department Angered by FEMA 'Stunt'

It looked like any other Washington press briefing, with a public affairs official walking up to a podium, introducing a government official and kicking off a press conference.

But what happened next raised the ire of the news media and ticked off Bush administration officials.

Tuesday the Federal Emergency Management Agency announced it was holding a news conference to answer reporters' questions about the federal agency's emergency response to the Southern California wildfires.

The agency gave reporters just 15 minutes notice to attend, and those members of the media who called in via phone lines could listen to the event but were not able to ask questions.

FEMA's Deputy Administrator Harvey Johnson conducted the event like a regular press briefing, assuring those in attendance that FEMA -- the agency that performed so poorly in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina -- was responding well to the disaster in Southern California.

"The report basically is that were doing a fine, doing a pretty good job," Johnson told the audience.

The event went smoothly. That is, until the news media discovered that the press conference wasn't exactly a press conference at all.

Unlike most press briefings, this one was missing a key component: members of the press.

FEMA: No Reporters? No Problem.

No reporters? No problem for FEMA. The agency filled the press room with its own public affairs personnel who asked questions.

It looked real enough for cable networks to briefly air the live event.

"I'll be glad to take some of your questions," Johnson said.

"Are you happy with FEMA's response so far?" one staffer asked.

"I'm very happy with FEMA's response so far," Johnson replied.

And so it went for more than 10 minutes, without any journalists.

...

http://www.abcnews.go.com/TheLaw/story?id=3782176



nbs2
Oct 26, 2007, 09:22 PM
I, along with most people, have been really impressed with the FEMA response. This was a totally unnecessary stunt. If anything, while not changing my view of those on the ground, my opinion of the leadership is lessened.

I'm glad, that for once, the WH wasn't involved in a PR mess.

ham_man
Oct 26, 2007, 09:40 PM
This seems unnecesary given the fact that it appears they are doing a good job. You have got to take advantage of all the good news and press you can, and for heaven's sake if you can't do that at least sit on your hands and don't turn it into a negative...which is exactly what they did here...:rolleyes:

lord patton
Oct 26, 2007, 09:50 PM
I wish I could say, "Wow, how unbelievable." Alas...

And why would they think they'd get away with it, anyhow?

mactastic
Oct 29, 2007, 03:47 PM
Makes one wonder how many times this has worked in the past...

solvs
Oct 30, 2007, 04:37 AM
Makes one wonder how many times this has worked in the past...

Didn't Bush once do something similar with a speech in front of members of the military who were actually part of the military's publicity dept? Forgot what they're called, but at least he got called on it. Kinda.

Yeah, I'm not surprised either, and it is doubly stupid since they didn't even make things worse this time.

it5five
Oct 30, 2007, 04:42 AM
The man on NPR who reported about this had a good response:

He interviewed himself about the situation.

He also made sure to give himself some flattering compliments, just as the staffers did.

solvs
Oct 30, 2007, 06:40 AM
To quote Olbermann about the guy responsible, who was supposed to be promoted, but wasn't after this: “…We’re told that a high ranking member of the Bush administration reviewed someone’s record, found him lacking and then severed ties with him."

:D

KingYaba
Oct 30, 2007, 07:57 PM
This is right out of the Soviet Union's playbook. :eek:

Dont Hurt Me
Oct 30, 2007, 08:50 PM
FEMA...isnt that just another Social Program destroyed by BushCo? Not much that comes from this administration that isnt fiction.

hulugu
Oct 31, 2007, 12:57 AM
Makes one wonder how many times this has worked in the past...

Didn't Bush once do something similar with a speech in front of members of the military who were actually part of the military's publicity dept? Forgot what they're called, but at least he got called on it. Kinda.

Yeah, I'm not surprised either, and it is doubly stupid since they didn't even make things worse this time.

This is old hat for this administration. Remember Jeff Gannon (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jeff_Gannon)? How did an unknown reporter, with mediocre press credentials, and an 'interesting' past, get to work in the White House Press Corps?

Or, the allegiance questionnaires for town-meetings? Rummy getting a friendly military audience, except for one notable exchange. The White House has been handling it's public face for so long it's become reflexive. This time they got caught.

solvs
Oct 31, 2007, 04:34 AM
I almost forgot about gay prostitute "Jeff Gannon". I don't get it though. They already have their own media propagandists. Now they're just getting lazy.

I was trying really hard not to laugh when Chertoff was talking about how they wouldn't tolerate such things, so I started crying instead.