I LOVED MY JOB at the White Housealmost every day.
Serving as the White House press secretary was the most rewarding, engaging, exciting, and enjoyable job I could ever imagine holding. It also was the toughest, hardest, most grinding and grueling job I could ever imagine holding. By definition, the job was paradoxical. To this day, I dont know how I could love so much something that often seemed so hard to do.
During my time in the White House, I traveled with President Bush almost everywhere he went. I met the Pope, twice. I met the Yankees manager, Joe Torre, once. I stood on the Great Wall of China with President Bush. I entered closed rooms at the Kremlin that are part of President Putins office. I observed Memorial Day on the beaches of Normandy, France, paying tribute to lost soldiers in a pristine cemetery where American lives were given so the world could be free. I was with President Bush all day on September 11, 2001, and I stood paces from him three days later, when he visited the rubble where the World Trade Center once stood. I also was with the President when he visited the mothers and fathers, and the sons and daughters, and the wives of those who gave their lives in Afghanistan and Iraq. I heard people tell him, time and again, how devastated they were by the loss, but how much their son or husband loved our military and loved our country.
In Washington, I regularly sat in on meetings in the Oval Office. I dropped in to see President Bush whenever I needed to ask him a question or get guidance on an issue. I was invited by the President to spend time in his home, the residence on the third floor of the Mansion, and at Camp David. I traveled on Marine One and Air Force One. I was also a regular in little Crawford, Texas, where I got my hair cut for five dollars.
I briefed the White House press corps three hundred times on camera. My job was to stay at that podium until the senior wire reporter said, Thank you. Only then could I retreat to the safety of my office. I got to know the people in the White House press corps well, very well.
I spent days and nights at the White House, doing my job during a recession, September 11, two wars, and an anthrax attack.
I learned to get by on little sleep and little free time.
In the little free time I had, I met Becki Davis, the woman who became my wife. She also worked at the White House.
This book is about my two and a half years in that grand mansion. Its about the President. Its about the White House press corps. Its about how news gets made, and how news gets covered.
This book attempts to capture much of what I saw behind the scenes about President Bush, his policies and his character, and I describe it so readers can have a deeper view of who he is and why he does what he does.
This book is also about the press, and thats a very complicated topic in itself. The White House press corps is one of the toughest, sharpest, most skeptical groups anyone will ever encounter. Theyre the best in the business, and thats why theyre stationed at the White House.
They have a tough job to do, and their lives arent easy. For all the glamour of the White House, its not an easy beat. Except for my West Wing office and the office of my deputies, the White House is off-limits to the press. Unlike reporters who cover the Congress, White House reporters cant walk the halls and bump into good sources for news. Instead, theyre chained to cramped work spaces, waiting for their phones to ring with the returned calls they are hoping for. Only with an appointment and an escort can they penetrate deeper into the corridors of White House power.
Theyre a hard-driving, competitive group. The TV reporters know a good White House beat can spring them to fame and fortuneif they can get on the air. The newspaper, wire, and magazine reporters are all looking for an edge or an angle that will make their work stand out from that of the rest of their colleagues.
When the White House press corps shows up for work each morning, there is no telling what story they will coverwhich is why many of them find the White House so exciting. One day its Social Security, the next day its a summit meeting between two heads of state, the next day its the Presidents own health, and one day its war. And in war, some of the nations finest reporters have lost their lives or been wounded covering the news. White House reporters are fast on their feet, and with few exceptions, theyre generaliststhey cant be experts in all the fields they cover because their editors ask them to cover too many fields. Thats one reason why much of their reporting emphasizes conflict and politics. Conflict and politics are themes that link much of what the press cover.
In person and one-on-one, White House reporters are also some of the most engaging and enjoyable people with whom to spend time. Some of the most pleasant reporters I ever met were at the White House. Ive tipped a glass and shared a meal with almost all of themand enjoyed it every time. But when they gather together for the daily, televised briefing, a funny thing happens. Gone are the usual pleasantries that marked most of my relationships with the press. Instead, an organized feeding frenzy broke out.
White House reporters sometimes like to grumble. When I was press secretary, they grumbled about the President, they grumbled about their own industry and its weaknesses, they grumbled about their editors, and they grumbled about Congress. Every now and then, they grumbled about me. White House reporters said I was tight-lipped and secretive.
This book explains why I did my job the way I did, particularly during a time of war.
Writing about the White House press corps isnt easy. Theyre a complicated group that carries out a very important mission for our country. As much as the American people, myself included, sometimes grumble about the press, their work is vital to our nations freedom.
Whatever their faults, theyre a watchdog on the government, and every governmentno matter what party and no matter what era we live inneeds a watchdog. They break fascinating stories that grab the attention of readers and viewers. In addition to their coverage of the White House and the government, the press provide useful, helpful news about wide-ranging topics like food safety, child care, and health care. In times of crisis, we tune in by the tens of millions. Whether its after a natural disaster, like a hurricane or earthquake, or after the attacks of September 11, the American people turn to the media to find out whats going on.
Changes are under way in the press corps. The networks have been losing viewers for years, and their remaining viewers are typically older. Cable TV news shows, especially those on Fox, are cutting deeply into territory that used to be the exclusive domain of the broadcast networks. As newspapers lose readers, younger Americans especially are turning to the Internet and to bloggers. The media is fracturing into more choices and more diversity. While the White House briefing room is home mostly to the largest news organizations in the world representing mainstream media (CBS, ABC, NBC, the Washington Post, the New York Times, the Wall Street Journal, et cetera), the immediacy of the Internet and cable news has changed the way all White House reporters do their jobsfor better and for worse.