- Originally published in the Washington Post on September 12, 2004
John F. Kerry continues to be elusive to the media contingent traveling
with him on his charter jet. Not that anyone is focused on this much,
but regular reporters on the plane say that the Democratic presidential
nominee has not had a formal news conference since Aug. 9. On Aug. 2,
he took two questions from the media in Grand Rapids. On Aug. 14,
during a flight from Portland, Ore., to Idaho, he came back to chat
about windsurfing.
Since then -- nothing. Reporters who sit 20 feet from Kerry only see him with a cast of thousands at rallies.
On Wednesday, traveling journalists got excited when he walked up to
the assembled horde on the tarmac near Cincinnati. But after making a
brief statement marking "the tragic milestone" of the 1,000 dead U.S.
troops in Iraq, he walked off, ignoring shouted questions.
The campaign further raised reporters' ire Thursday by moving the news
media back from Kerry as he bounded down the stairs from the plane --
symbolically and literally suggesting that Kerry was putting distance
between himself and the news media.
"I think it's ridiculous," said Jodi Wilgoren, who covers the Kerry
campaign for the New York Times. "There are a lot of things happening
in the country and the world, and the public has legitimate questions
they'd like to ask. I don't know what he's afraid of. He's criticized
the president for not giving enough press conferences. And now we face
daily arm-wrestling to ask a question."
Privately, campaign aides say the campaign is trying to keep Kerry "on
message" and does not want to run the risk that he might make other
news.
Spokesman David Wade defended the campaign's media-access policy,
saying that Kerry has been "dramatically more accessible than the
incumbent president of the United States."
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