On Saturday, Politico’s White House correspondents reported about the sharp contrast between the “omnipresent” President Donald Trump and the “invisible” and “shielded” former President Biden.
White House journalist Eli Stokols and White House Bureau Chief Dasha Burns stated that since Trump’s inauguration last week, he has made numerous policy announcements, delivered numerous speeches, and engaged in lengthy interviews with media.
Compared to the more subdued Biden years, Trump’s massive media presence is a change.
“Yes, Trump was eager to sign all those executive orders reversing Biden’s policies,” they stated. “But the bigger flex for Trump, 78, was to contrast his accessibility, aptitude and activity with his predecessor, who was so often shielded from public view by aides wary of showcasing the 82-year-old’s growing limitations.”(AP Photo/Mark Schiefelbein)
“As fast as the movers changed out the White House furniture, the country went from an invisible president, unable to command the spotlight, to an omnipresent one who wants the public’s attention at all times,” they kept going.
A journalist described Trump’s press conferences as a “free-for-all” for reporters following “four years of begging for access to the more cloistered Biden.”
“Biden occasionally took questions from reporters, but his more casual interactions with the media were infrequent and hardly lasted longer than a few minutes. He was out of sight much of the time,” Politico said.
However, one drawback the report examined was if having continual access to Trump and his ideas would be “too much for the media and public to absorb.”
“Within the press corps, there is some ambivalence about Trump’s firehose on blast,” they wrote. “The excitement about being able to ask the president about why he pardoned people convicted of vandalism, trespassing and violently attacking police officers, not to mention questions about everything from tariffs to TikTok, is tempered by the awareness that it is all, once again, too much. Too much to process and capture in real-time. Too much for the country to digest.”
On Sunday, Trump held a 20-minute gaggle with reporters on Air Force One where he discussed a variety of topics like TikTok, and Greenland. He also took a dig at his predecessor by telling reporters they have “a little bit more access” than they did with Biden by like “5,000%.”
