'Why did you turn them off?': Reporters grill Sean Spicer over decision to reduce on-camera press briefings
Win McNamee/Getty Images
Spicer quipped about cameras after Acosta asked if President Donald Trump still believed House Republicans' healthcare bill was "mean."
"Does he still think the bill is mean?" Acosta asked in a press briefing on Monday.
"There's no camera on Jim," Spicer said.
"Maybe we should turn the cameras on, Sean," Acosta replied. "Why don't we turn the cameras on? They're in the room, the lights are on."
The exchanged continued later in the briefing when Spicer refused to answer whether the White House would continue to have limited televised press availabilities.
"Why are the cameras off, Sean?" Acosta asked. "Why did you turn them off? Can you just give us an answer to that? Can you tell us why you turned the cameras off? It's a legitimate question. You are a taxpayer-funded spokesman for the United States government, can you at least give us an explanation for why the cameras are off?"
One America News Network White House correspondent Trey Yingst then asked, "Can we get this out of the way? Can we address the cameras issue?"
Spicer responded that "some days we will have them, some days we won't."
In the past several weeks, the White House has severely reduced the number of weekly on-camera briefings, a formerly daily practice, holding audio-only briefings instead.
Asked on Fox News last week about the lack of televised briefings, Spicer accused reporters of seeking attention rather than attempting to get information from the White House.
"I think some of these reporters are more interested in their YouTube clips than than they are in getting factual news," Spicer said. "Look at the number of questions that get asked over and over again just so a reporter can get a clip of themselves saying something or yelling at someone."
The White House Correspondents Association has condemned the White House communications department for avoiding the daily televised press briefings, which yielded illuminating and occasionally embarrassing headlines for the administration.
"We believe strongly that Americans should be able to watch and listen to senior government officials face questions from an independent news media," Jeff Mason, the president of the White House Correspondents' Association, wrote in a memo on Friday. "We are not satisfied with the current state of play, and we will work hard to change it."
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