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Updated 12 hours ago
WASHINGTON — President Trump unloaded on the news media Friday for using anonymous sources — just hours after members of his own staff insisted on briefing reporters only on condition their names be concealed.
Unleashing a line of attack that energized an enthusiastic crowd at the nation's largest gathering of conservative activists, Trump said unethical reporters “make up stories and make up sources.”
“They shouldn't be allowed to use sources unless they use somebody's name,” he declared. “Let their name be put out there.”
Trump told the Conservative Political Action Conference that while not all reporters are bad, the “fake news” crowd “doesn't represent the people. It will never represent the people and we're going to do something about it.”
Trump didn't expand on what he had in mind or which news organizations he was talking about. But his broadsides represented an escalation of his running battle against the press, which he has taken to calling “the opposition party.”
The president has chafed at a number of anonymously sourced stories, including numerous reports describing contacts between his campaign advisers and Russian intelligence agents, which the White House has sharply disputed.
However, members of his White House team regularly demand anonymity when talking to reporters. That was the case Friday morning when Trump officials briefed reporters on chief of staff Reince Priebus' contact with top FBI officials concerning the Russia reports.
Later Friday, after Trump's speech, several news organizations — including The New York Times, The Los Angeles Times, CNN and Politico — were blocked from joining a White House media gaggle (an informal briefing), according to news reports.
The Associated Press chose not to participate following the move by White House press secretary Sean Spicer. Lauren Easton, the AP's director of media relations, said in a statement: “The AP believes the public should have as much access to the president as possible.”
Spicer invited only a pool of news organizations that represents and shares reporting with the larger press corps. He also invited several other major news outlets, as well as smaller organizations, including the conservative Washington Times, One America News Network and Breitbart News, whose former executive chairman, Steve Bannon, is Trump's chief strategist. When the additional news organizations attempted to gain access, they were stopped.
The White House said it felt “everyone was represented” by those in the pool and the invited organizations.
“We decided to add a couple of additional people beyond the pool. Nothing more than that,” said White House spokeswoman Sarah Sanders.
Trump's appearance at CPAC represented a triumph for both speaker and audience — each ascendant after years when they were far from the center of the political universe.
Elizabeth Connors of New York recalled past gatherings as collections of the “downtrodden.”
Today, she said, “it's energized” after years in which “we've been just pushed down, pushed down, pushed down.”
Nicholas Henderson of Coeur d'Alene, Idaho, was there in his “Make America Great Again” hat and pronounced Trump's speech rousing.
“He touched on a lot of things we'd already heard before, which is reassuring, tells us he's still committed to those promises he made during the campaign,” Henderson said.
Trump, who first appeared at CPAC as a reality TV star six years ago, recalled his past visits with nostalgia, saying the crowd helped put him on the path to the presidency.
“I loved the commotion,” he said. “And then they did these polls where I went through the roof and I wasn't even running, right? But it gave me an idea.”
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