White House Correspondents' Association
The White House Correspondents' Association (WHCA) is an organization of journalists who cover the White House and the president of the United States. The WHCA was founded on February 25, 1914, by journalists in response to an unfounded rumor that a United States congressional committee would select which journalists could attend press conferences of President Woodrow Wilson.[4]
Abbreviation | WHCA |
---|---|
Formation | February 25, 1914 |
Tax ID no. | 52-0799067[1] |
Legal status | 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization[1] |
Location | |
Coordinates | 38°53′52″N 77°03′18″W |
Tamara Keith (NPR News)[2] | |
Steven Thomma[2] | |
Revenue (2015) | $366,481[3] |
Expenses (2015) | $311,090[3] |
Employees (2015) | 0[3] |
Website | www |
The WHCA operates independently of the White House. Among the more notable issues handled by the WHCA are the credentialing process, access to the president and physical conditions in the White House press briefing rooms.[5][6] Its most high-profile activity is the annual White House Correspondents' dinner, which is traditionally attended by the president and covered by the news media.
Association leadership, 2021-2022
The leadership of the White House Correspondents' Association includes:[5]
- Officers
- Board members
- Doug Mills, New York Times
- Justin Sink, Bloomberg News
- Kelly O’Donnell, NBC News
- Karen Travers, ABC News
- Todd J. Gillman, Dallas Morning News
- Executive Director
- Steven Thomma[7]
Table of association presidents
|
|
White House press room
The WHCA is responsible for assigned seating in the James S. Brady Press Briefing Room in the White House.[12][13]
White House Correspondents' dinner
The WHCA's annual dinner, begun in 1921,[14] has become a Washington, D.C., tradition, and is traditionally attended by the president and vice president. Sixteen presidents have attended at least one WHCA dinner, beginning with Calvin Coolidge in 1924.[4][15] The dinner is traditionally held on the evening of the last Saturday in April at the Washington Hilton.
Until 1962, the dinner was open only to men, even though WHCA's membership included women. At the urging of Helen Thomas, President John F. Kennedy refused to attend the dinner unless the ban on women was dropped.[16]
Prior to World War II, the annual dinner featured singing between courses, a homemade movie, and an hour-long, post-dinner show with big-name performers.[4] Since 1983, the featured speaker has usually been a comedian, with the dinner taking on the form of a comedy roast of the president and his administration.
The dinner also funds scholarships for gifted students in college journalism programs.[17]
Many annual dinners have been cancelled or downsized due to deaths or political crises. The dinner was cancelled in 1930 due to the death of former president William Howard Taft; in 1942, following the United States' entry into World War II; and in 1951, over what President Harry S. Truman called the "uncertainty of the world situation."[18] In 1981, Ronald Reagan did not attend because he was recuperating after the attempted assassination the previous month, but he did phone in and told a joke about the shooting.[19]
During his presidency, Donald Trump did not attend the dinners in 2017, 2018, and 2019.[20] Trump indicated that he might attend in 2019 since this dinner did not feature a comedian as the featured speaker.[21] However, on April 5, 2019, he announced that he again would not attend, calling the dinner "so boring, and so negative," instead hosting a political rally that evening in Wisconsin.[22][23] On April 22, Trump ordered a boycott of the dinner, with White House Cabinet Secretary Bill McGinley assembling the agencies' chiefs of staff to issue a directive that members of the administration not attend.[24][25] However, some members of the administration attended pre- and post-dinner parties.[26]
Dinner criticisms
The WHCD has been increasingly criticized as an example of the coziness between the White House press corps and the administration.[27][28] The dinner has typically included a skit, either live or videotaped, by the sitting U.S. president in which he mocks himself, for the amusement of the press corps.[27] The press corps, in turn, hobnobs with administration officials, even those who are unpopular and are not regularly cooperative with the press.[27] Increasing scrutiny by bloggers has contributed to added public focus on this friendliness.[27]
After the 2007 dinner, New York Times columnist Frank Rich implied that the Times would no longer participate in the dinners.[29] Rich wrote that the dinner had become "a crystallization of the press's failures in the post-9/11 era" because it "illustrates how easily a propaganda-driven White House can enlist the Washington news media in its shows".[29]
Other criticism has focused on the amount of money actually raised for scholarships, which has decreased over the past few years.[17]
The dinners have drawn increasing public attention, and the guest list grows "more Hollywood".[6] The attention given to the guest list and entertainers often overshadows the intended purpose of the dinner, which is to "acknowledge award-winners, present scholarships, and give the press and the president an evening of friendly appreciation".[6] This has led to an atmosphere of coming to the event only to "see and be seen".[6] This usually takes place at pre-dinner receptions and post-dinner parties hosted by various media organizations, which are often a bigger draw and can be more exclusive than the dinners themselves.[30][31][32]
The public airings of the controversies around the dinner from the mid-2000s onward gradually focused concern about the nature of the event.[33] While interest in the event from entertainers, journalists, and political figures was high during the Obama administration, by the period of the Trump administration, interest gradually slowed in attending, especially after President Trump announced he would not attend, nor his staff.[34] Business related to the weekend event slowed considerably, including at hotels, high-end restaurants, salons, caterers, and limo companies. During the Trump administration, some media companies stopped hosting parties, while other of the roughly 25 events held during the three-day period gained more prominence as signs of social status.[33] By 2019, the dinner and associated parties had returned somewhat to their previous nature as networking and media functions, with packed houses of media industry employees and Washington political figures.[26]
After the April 30, 2022 dinner, where comedian Trevor Noah joked it would be "the nation’s most distinguished superspreader event," several attendees including Secretary of State Antony Blinken tested positive for COVID-19.[35] No cases of serious illness were reported as a result of the dinner.[36]
List of dinners
Date | Performer(s) | Notes |
---|---|---|
1944 | Bob Hope, Fritz Kreisler, Gracie Fields, Pedro Vargas, Fred Waring, Elsie Janis, Ed Gardiner, Nan Merriman, Robert Merrill, and Frank Black[37] | |
1945 | Frank Sinatra, Danny Thomas, Jimmy Durante, Fanny Brice, Danny Kaye, and Garry Moore[38] | |
1946 | Ed Sullivan (host); featured performers included Herb Shriner, Señor Wences, Paul Draper, Larry Adler, and Sugar Chile Robinson.[39] | |
1953 | Bob Hope[40] | |
1954 | Milton Berle, The Four Step Brothers,[41] Jaye P. Morgan, The McGuire Sisters, and Irving Berlin performed. | Berlin performed an original song, "I Still Like Ike," to honor President Eisenhower.[18] |
1955 | Duke Ellington, Tennessee Ernie Ford, Channing Pollock[42] | |
1956 | James Cagney emceed; Nat King Cole, Patti Page, and Dizzy Gillespie performed.[43] | |
1961 | The Peiro Brothers (jugglers), Julie London, Dorothy Provine, Mischa Elman, and Jerome Hines[44] | |
1962 | Peter Sellers, Gwen Verdon, Richard Goodman, and Benny Goodman shared hosting duties. | Event opened to female correspondents for the first time. |
1963 | Merv Griffin emceed; Barbra Streisand performed.[45] | |
1964 | Duke Ellington, the Smothers Brothers[18] | |
1968 | Richard Pryor | |
1969 | The Disneyland Golden Horseshoe Revue[46] | |
1970 | George Carlin[47][48] | |
May 3, 1975 | Danny Thomas and Marlo Thomas[49] | |
1976 | Bob Hope emceed and Chevy Chase performed.[50] | When President Ford rose to speak, he pretended to fumble, and began his speech with "Good evening. I'm Gerald Ford and you're not"—a reference to Chase's catchphrase from Saturday Night Live's Weekend Update.[50] |
1983 | Mark Russell[51] | |
1984 | Rich Little[52] | |
1985 | Mort Sahl[53] | |
April 17, 1986 | Dick Cavett[54] | |
1987 | Jay Leno[55] | |
April 21, 1988 | Yakov Smirnoff[56] | |
1989 | Jim Morris (Bush impersonator)[57] | Garry Shandling made a surprise appearance.[58] |
1990 | Jim Morris[59] | |
1991 | Sinbad[60] | |
1992 | Paula Poundstone | Poundstone was the first solo female host.[61] |
May 1, 1993 | Elayne Boosler[62][63] | This was the first year that the dinner was televised on C-SPAN. |
April 23, 1994 | Al Franken[64][65] | |
April 29, 1995 | Conan O'Brien | |
May 4, 1996 | Al Franken[66][67] | |
April 26, 1997 | Jon Stewart[68][69] | Norm Macdonald delivered a Weekend Update parody. |
April 25, 1998 | Ray Romano | |
May 1, 1999 | Aretha Franklin[70] | A non-comedian was chosen to host because of the recent impeachment of President Clinton.[71] NBC's Brian Williams performed a skit. |
April 29, 2000 | Jay Leno[72] | President Bill Clinton also mocked himself in the short film President Clinton: The Final Days, which depicted him as a lonely man closing down a nearly deserted White House, riding a bicycle, and learning about the Internet with the help of actor Mike Maronna. |
April 28, 2001 | Darrell Hammond | |
May 4, 2002 | Drew Carey[73] | |
April 26, 2003 | Ray Charles | President George W. Bush decided to eschew a comedian that year, given the recent invasion of Iraq.[74] |
May 1, 2004 | Jay Leno[55] | |
April 30, 2005 | Cedric the Entertainer | First Lady Laura Bush also performed some jokes.[75][76] |
April 29, 2006 | Stephen Colbert[77] | Wikinews has related news:
|
April 21, 2007 | Rich Little | David Letterman appeared by video with a Top 10 list of "favorite George W. Bush moments".[81] |
April 26, 2008 | Craig Ferguson[82] | Like his Late Late Show monologues, Ferguson appeared to go off script and started improvising new jokes. It was noted that President Bush had difficulty understanding Ferguson's Scottish accent.[83] |
May 9, 2009 | Wanda Sykes[84] | |
May 1, 2010 | Jay Leno[85] | Leno hosted for the fourth time, more than any other individual in the dinner's history.[86] Leno had been chosen several weeks before his controversial Tonight Show conflict,[87] and his use of recycled jokes was noted by critics.[88] |
April 30, 2011 | Seth Meyers[89][90][91] | Both President Barack Obama and then-Secretary of Defense Robert Gates were seen laughing at Meyers' jokes about the government's apparent inability to track down Osama Bin Laden, even though they were a day away from the operation to assassinate him.President Obama and Meyers also mocked then-Celebrity Apprentice host Donald Trump's role as the face of the birther movement. Trump (who was present at the dinner) would go on to be elected President of the United States five years later in the 2016 United States presidential election. Journalists that were present at the dinner say that being mocked by President Obama and Meyers led him to decide to run for President of the United States, but Trump would later deny this, saying that he had been considering a run for the Presidency for many years prior to the dinner.[92] |
April 28, 2012 | Jimmy Kimmel[93][94][95] | |
April 27, 2013 | Conan O'Brien[96][97][98] | |
May 3, 2014 | Joel McHale[99][100] | |
April 25, 2015 | Cecily Strong[101][102] | Keegan-Michael Key made a guest appearance as President Obama's "anger translator",[103] Luther, a recurring character from the Comedy Central show Key & Peele.[104] Head Writer: Cailean Hammacott |
April 30, 2016 | Larry Wilmore[105][106] | Wilmore delivered a controversial, searing routine targeting the president, elite media, lobbyists, politicians, and celebrities. At the end of the speech, Wilmore ended his set by thanking President Obama for having been the country's first black President and finished his speech by calling him "my nigga" on live television. This remark sparked controversy among the media, with some calling it disrespectful.[107] |
April 29, 2017 | Hasan Minhaj[108][109] | President Donald Trump did not attend the dinner.[110][111] The last time a sitting president did not attend in person was Ronald Reagan in 1981, who was recovering from an assassination attempt.[19]The Washington Post journalists Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein presented awards and spoke about the importance of the First Amendment.[111][112] |
April 28, 2018 | Michelle Wolf[113][114] | President Trump did not attend the dinner for the second consecutive year.[115] Instead, he sent his press secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders.[116]Several attendees walked out in reaction to Wolf's "brutal" comments.[117]Wolf received both praise and criticism for her monologue. The association released a rare statement regarding the monologue.[118][119][120] After the dinner, newspaper The Hill informed the WHCA that it would no longer participate in the event, saying, "In short, there’s simply no reason for us to participate in something that casts our profession in a poor light. Major changes are needed to the annual event."[121][122] |
April 27, 2019 | Ron Chernow[123][124] | President Trump did not attend the dinner for the third consecutive year.[125] Additionally, Trump ordered some of his staff and administration members to boycott the dinner.[126]
The WHCA chose historian Ron Chernow as the featured speaker instead of a comedian after Wolf's controversial set.[123] |
2020 | — | The dinner was originally scheduled for April 25, 2020, with comedian Kenan Thompson hosting and political entertainer and former WHCD host Hasan Minhaj as the featured entertainment.[127][128] On March 22 the dinner was postponed due to the COVID-19 pandemic in the United States, without naming a substitute date.[129] On April 13 a new date of August 29 was announced.[130]On June 23 WHCA President Jonathan Karl announced that the dinner itself would be canceled, but that the WHCA was working on a virtual presentation format to honor award winners and scholarship recipients.[131][127] On August 14 Hasan Minhaj spoke privately via Zoom with the WHCA 2020 scholarship recipients, who also attended a private online panel discussion by three veteran Washington political reporters that day.[132][133] |
2021 | — | On April 14, 2021, WHCA executive director Steven Thomma announced that improvements in the pandemic situation had not been sufficient to allow the association to proceed with a large indoor event, and that no dinner would be held in 2021.[134] However, the association still intended to select recipients for its annual journalism awards and student scholarships, and announced that it planned to go ahead with the dinner the following year, on April 30, 2022.[134] |
April 30, 2022 | Trevor Noah[135] | The dinner was held in person for the first time since the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic.[135] President Joe Biden attended the dinner, making him the first president to attend the dinner since Trump boycotted the event throughout his presidency.[136] |
Gallery
- President Gerald Ford (left) with White House Correspondent Helen Thomas at the 1975 Dinner.
- President Bill Clinton (right) with television actor Mike Maronna (left) celebrating a successful online purchase in a comedic short film recorded for the 2000 Dinner.
- President George W. Bush (left) with Bush impersonator Steve Bridges in character (right) at the 2006 Dinner.
- President Barack Obama ending his final Correspondents' Dinner speech with a mic drop at the 2016 Dinner.
Awards
The Aldo Beckman Memorial Award
Awarded for overall excellence in White House coverage.[137]
Year | Recipient | Employer | Ref |
---|---|---|---|
2000 | Jeanne Cummings | The Wall Street Journal | [138] |
2001 | Steve Thomma | Knight Ridder | [139] |
2002 | Anne E. Kornblut | The Boston Globe | [140] |
2003 | Dana Milbank | The Washington Post | [141] |
2004 | David Sanger | The New York Times | [142] |
2005 | Susan Page | USA Today | [143] |
2006 | Carl Cannon | National Journal | [144] |
2007 | Kenneth T. Walsh | U.S. News & World Report | [145] |
2008 | Alexis Simendinger | National Journal | [146] |
2009 | Michael Abramowitz | The Washington Post | [147] |
2010 | Mark Knoller | CBS News | [148] |
2011 | Peter Baker | The New York Times | [149] |
2012 | Scott Wilson | The Washington Post | [150] |
2013 | Ryan Lizza | The New Yorker | [151] |
2014 | Glenn Thrush | Politico | [152][153] |
Brianna Keilar | CNN | ||
2015 | Peter Baker | The New York Times | [154][155] |
2016 | Carol Lee | The Wall Street Journal | [156][157] |
2017 | Greg Jaffe | The Washington Post | [158] |
2018 | Maggie Haberman | The New York Times | [159] |
2019 | McKay Coppins | The Atlantic | [160] |
2020 | Yamiche Alcindor | PBS NewsHour | [161] |
2021 | Philip Rucker | The Washington Post | [162] |
2022 | Johathan Swan | Axios | [163] |
WHCA Award for Excellence in Presidential News Coverage Under Deadline Pressure
The award was established in 1970 as the Merriman Smith Memorial Award for outstanding examples of deadline reporting.[137] It was renamed in 2022 after the WHCA determined that Smith had supported excluding Black and female journalists from membership in the National Press Club and from attending the White House Correspondents' Dinner.[164]
Year | Recipient | Distinction | Employer | Article / Show | Notes & Ref |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
2000 | Gary Nurenberg | Broadcast | KTLA-Tribune Broadcasting | [138] | |
Jodi Enda | Knight-Ridder Newspapers | [138] | |||
2001 | Jim Angle | Broadcast | Fox News Channel | [139] | |
Sandra Sobieraj | Associated Press | [139] | |||
2002 | Peter Maer | Broadcast | CBS News | [140] | |
Ron Fournier | Associated Press | [140] | |||
2003 | Jim Angle | Broadcast | Fox News Channel | [141] | |
David Sanger | The New York Times | [141] | |||
2004 | Mike Allen | The Washington Post | [142] | ||
2005 | Ron Fournier | Associated Press | [143] | ||
Jackie Calmes | The Wall Street Journal | Honorable Mention[143] | |||
2006 | Terry Moran | Broadcast | ABC News | [144] | |
Deb Riechmann | Associated Press | [144] | |||
2007 | Martha Raddatz | Broadcast | ABC News | [145] | |
David Sanger | The New York Times | [145] | |||
2008 | Ed Henry | Broadcast | CNN | [146] | |
Deb Riechmann | Associated Press | [146] | |||
2009 | David Greene | Broadcast | NPR | [147] | |
Sandra Sobieraj Westfall | People magazine | [147] | |||
2010 | Jake Tapper | Broadcast | ABC News | [148] | |
Ben Feller | Associated Press | [148] | |||
2011 | Jake Tapper | Broadcast | ABC News | [149] | |
Dan Balz | The Washington Post | [149] | |||
2012 | Jake Tapper | Broadcast | ABC News | [150] | |
Glenn Thrush, Carrie Budoff Brown, Manu Raju and John Bresnahan | Politico | "Excellence in presidential coverage under pressure" | [150] | ||
2013 | Terry Morgan | Broadcast | ABC News | [151] | |
Julie Pace | Associated Press | ||||
2014 | Peter Maer | Broadcast | CBS News | "Sequestration" | [152][153] |
Peter Baker | The New York Times | "Obama Seeks Approval by Congress for Strike in Syria" | |||
2015 | Jim Avila | Broadcast | ABC News | Cuba/Alan Gross | [154][155] |
Josh Lederman | Associated Press | Fence Jumper | |||
2016 | Norah O'Donnell | Broadcast | CBS News | [156][157] | |
Matt Viser | The Boston Globe | ||||
2017 | Edward-Isaac Dovere | Politico | "How Obama set a trap for Raul Castro" | [165] | |
2018 | Evan Perez, Jim Sciutto, Jake Tapper and Carl Bernstein | Broadcast | CNN | [159] | |
Josh Dawsey | Politico | ||||
2019 | Ed Henry | Broadcast | Fox News | [166] | |
Josh Dawsey | Washington Post | ||||
2020 | Alan Cullison, Rebecca Ballhaus, and Dustin Volz | The Wall Street Journal | "Trump Repeatedly Pressed Ukraine to Investigate Biden’s Son" | [167] | |
Broadcast | CNN | “FBI. Open the door.” | |||
2021 | Michael Balsamo | Associated Press | "Disputing Trump, Barr says no widespread election fraud" | [168][169] |
The Edgar A. Poe Memorial Award
Awarded for excellence on a story of national or regional significance.[137]
Year | Recipient | Employer | Article / Show | Notes & Ref |
---|---|---|---|---|
2000 | Sam Roe | The Toledo Blade | [138] | |
2001 | Elizabeth Marchak, Dave Davis, and Joan Mazzolini | The Plain Dealer | [139] | |
John Barry and Evan Thomas | Newsweek | Honorable Mention[139] | ||
David Pace | Associated Press | Honorable Mention[139] | ||
2002 | Evan Thomas, Mark Hosenball, Martha Brant, and Roy Gutman | Newsweek | [140] | |
Staff | The Seattle Times | Honorable Mention[140] | ||
Staff | The Dayton Daily News | Honorable Mention[140] | ||
2003 | Sean Naylor | Army Times | [141] | |
Staff | South Florida Sun-Sentinel | Honorable Mention[141] | ||
Michael Berens | Chicago Tribune | Honorable Mention[141] | ||
2004 | Russell Corollo and Mei-ling Hopgood | Dayton Daily News | [142] | |
Christopher H. Schmitt and Edward T. Pound | U.S. News & World Report | Honorable Mention[142] | ||
Michael Hudson | Southern Exposure magazine | Honorable Mention[142] | ||
Warren P. Strobel and Jonathan S. Landy | Knight Ridder | Honorable Mention[142] | ||
Rod Nordland and Michael Hirsh | Newsweek | Honorable Mention[142] | ||
Sami Yousafzai, Ron Moreau, and Michael Hirsh | Newsweek | Honorable Mention[142] | ||
Fareed Zakaria | Newsweek | Honorable Mention[142] | ||
2005 | Mark Fainaru-Wada and Lance Williams | The San Francisco Chronicle | [143] | |
Donald Barlett and James Steele | Time magazine | Honorable Mention[143] | ||
2006 | Marcus Stern and Jerry Kammer | Copley News Service | [144] | |
Staff | Time magazine | Honorable Mention[144] | ||
Russell Carollo and Larry Kaplow | Dayton Daily News | Honorable Mention[144] | ||
2007 | Joan Ryan | The San Francisco Chronicle | [145] | |
2008 | Paul Shukovsky, Tracy Johnson, and Daniel Lathrop | Seattle Post-Intelligencer | [146] | |
2009 | Michael J. Berens and Ken Armstrong | The Seattle Times | [147] | |
2010 | Suzanne Bohan and Sandy Kleffman | Contra Costa Times, California | [148] | |
2011 | Michael Berens | The Seattle Times | [149] | |
2012 | Matt Apuzzo, Adam Goldman, Eileen Sullivan | Associated Press | [150] | |
2013 | Jim Morris, Chris Hamby, Ronnie Greene | The Center for Public Integrity (CPI) | Hard Labor | [151] |
2014 | Megan Twohey | Reuters | "The Child Exchange: Inside America's Underground Market for Adopted Children," | [152][153] |
Chris Hamby, Matthew Mosk and Brian Ross | The Center for Public Integrity (CPI) and ABC News | "Breathless and Burdened: Dying from black lung, buried by law and medicine," | ||
2015 | Gary Fields, John R. Emshwiller, Rob Barry and Coulter Jones | Wall Street Journal | "America's Rap Sheet" | [154][155] |
Carol A. Leonnig | The Washington Post | "Secret Service" | ||
2016 | Neela Banerjee, John Cushman Jr., David Hasemyer and Lisa Song | InsideClimate News | [156][157] | |
Terrence McCoy | The Washington Post | |||
2017 | David Fahrenthold | The Washington Post | [158] | |
2018 | Jason Szep, Peter Eisler, Tim Reid, Lisa Girion, Grant Smith and team | Reuters | "Shock Tactics" | [159][170] |
Norah O'Donnell | CBS This Morning | Sexual Assault in the Air Force Academy | Honorable Mention[159][171] | |
Dan Diamond and Rachana Pradhan | Politico | Tom Price's Private Jet Travel | Honorable Mention[159][172] | |
See also
- Gridiron Club
- Radio and Television Correspondents' Association
- Alfred E. Smith Memorial Foundation Dinner
- Not the White House Correspondents’ Dinner
- National Press Club
- Parliamentary Press Gallery
- List of dining events
References
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The White House Correspondents Dinner required proof of vaccination and a same-day negative test, and boosters were strongly encouraged...Attendees of the dinner expressed resignation as the number of confirmed cases grew over the course of the day on Wednesday.
- Holmes, Jack (May 12, 2022). "So We're Not Gonna Mention the Gridiron Dinner Turned Out All Right?". Esquire. Retrieved May 15, 2022.
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