The news that the administration's press corps tried to keep Fox
News out of a press pool event with executive-pay czar Kenneth
Feinberg vindicates those who had thought that the White House's
pronouncement that Fox was "not really a news" outfit was
ominously undemocratic. While some
have tried to equate the administration's stance toward Fox with
the Bush administration's criticism of, for instance, NBC, there
is a clear distinction between complaining about specific aspects
of an outfit's coverage and declaring that company "not really
news." The connotation of that statement, I thought at the time
it was made, was that the administration does not have to provide
journalistic access to non-news companies. And I was right, as
they followed up that claim with a concrete effort to exclude Fox
from a news event. If they had done so successfully, would they
have tried to push the envelope and refuse Fox from more and more
events, with the ultimate goal of freezing them out altogether?
Maybe, maybe not, but the point is that it would be at their
discretion because Fox is not a news outlet.