Newsweek's
Michael Isikoff reports on the loophole -- big enough to
drive the White House visitor's log through -- in the Obama
administration's "transparency" policy:
As a senator, Barack Obama denounced the Bush administration for
holding "secret energy meetings" with oil executives at the White
House. But last week public-interest groups were dismayed when
his own administration rejected a Freedom of Information Act
request for Secret Service logs showing the identities of coal
executives who had visited the White House to discuss Obama's
"clean coal" policies.
Of course, the "dismayed" goody-two-shoes in
the public-interest crowd should have expected this, as the
Chicago Tribune's
John Kass observes:
The use of political muscle may be prohibited in the mythic
transcendental fairyland where much of the Obama spin originates
. . . But our president is from Chicago. . . . David Axelrod and
chief of staff Rahm Emanuel come right from Chicago Democratic
machine boss Mayor Richard Daley. They don't believe in fairies .
. .
It's the Chicago Way. Now, formally, it's also the Chicago on the
Potomac Way. . . .
The Examiner's Michael Barone similarly sees
the Chicago Way at work in the White House. The question
is whether the leg-thrillers in the White House press corps --
who react to Obama like 13-year-old girls react to the Jonas
Brothers -- will let their rock-star president
get away with being
Mayor Daley of America.
Are the fawning lapdogs who do stenography for Robert
Gibbs goody-two-shoes idealists? Or are they cynics? How
otherwise to explain why the
unexplained resignation of Fred E. Weiderhold -- the
inspector general for AmTrak,
Joe Biden's pet program -- has scarcely been noticed by the
D.C. press corps? You'd probably get more hard-hitting
investigative reporting from the Jonas Brothers fan-club
newsletter.