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Obama heckled during speech: Journalist or douchebag?

A self-styled reporter heckled President Obama as he announced a major shake-up in immigration policy.

By John Stoehr

A reporter for a conservative news site interrupted President Barack Obama on Friday as he was announcing a decision to suspend the deportation of children brought to the U.S. illegally. The policy shift was a game-changer politically, because the president essentially dared Republican challenger Mitt Romney to denounce the move, knowing that he can’t. Romney is in the unenviable position of having to serve two masters, as it were. To win in November, he must seize the Hispanic vote, which is wary of the hardline immigration policies he endorsed during the GOP primaries. And he must maintain the support of party’s conservative base, which in many ways is anti-immigrant.

But that was nearly overshadowed by an unprecedented breach of decorum in the White House press corps by a correspondent named Neil Munro. Munro writes for The Daily Caller, a website that aims to be the conservative version of The Huffington Post. It was founded by Tucker Carlson, who is best known for one of two things: He once said he instinctively wants to cross his legs whenever Hillary Clinton walks into a room; and The Daily Show’s Jon Stewart called him a dick on his own show, CNN’s “Crossfire,” which led to the demise of Carlson’s career as a TV pundit.

Munro interrupted the president four minutes into his statement. Over the course of Obama’s remarks, Munro shouted no fewer than six times while the he was speaking. The president was clearly livid, the White House Press Secretary had (surely pissy) words with Carlson afterward, and the media almost universally condemned his behavior and wondered: Is this a reporter or a heckler?

There were many reactions. Most said Munro’s actions were disrespectful, outrageous, and/or deserving of sanction by the White House. Even Fox News’ Bill O’Reilly, Chris Wallace and Shepard Smith thought so. Some thought it was racist or at least in keeping with attempts by wing-nut operatives to discredit Obama. Yet of all observations, one lacks sufficient attention. Munro blatantly and egregiously lied afterward, and his boss has now launched a propaganda campaign to rewrite this history.

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Here’s Munro’s take:

I always go to the White House prepared with questions for our president. I timed the question believing the president was closing his remarks, because naturally I have no intention of interrupting the President of the United States. I know he rarely takes questions before walking away from the podium. When I asked the question as he finished his speech, he turned his back on the many reporters, and walked away while I and at least one other reporter asked questions.

Salient points here: No intention to interrupt. “Mistimed” his question. And, importantly, Obama is stingy about questions.

No one can say with certainty what Munro intended, but we can say the president was not concluding his remarks. The event was carried live on CNN and others. The video clearly shows Obama was surprised by the interruption. Todd Zwillich, the radio correspondent for The Takeaway, tweeted this:

I was standing right behind Munro in the Rose Garden. Idea he ‘mistimed’ his questions isn’t credible. He purposely interrupted. 

And even if he had “mistimed” his question, he didn’t stop with one. In fact, he bullied the president into taking questions. The Village Voice’s Steven Thrasher was standing next to Munro and captured the “only clean audio of what he heckled at President Obama.”

Obama: Excuse me, sir.

Munro: You have to take questions.

Obama: It’s not time for questions, sir.

Munro: No, you have to take questions.

Obama: Not while I’m speaking.

So whatever he intended, this was not a matter of mistiming. It appeared deliberate, because not only did he interrupt the president, but he badgered him. This is why some headlines put quotes around “reporter.” To serious journalists, Munro was not practicing journalism.

But remember that third salient point in Munro’s statement – that Obama is stingy with questions. This has become grounds for Tucker Carlson’s push to reframe what happened, not in terms of Munro’s belligerence, disrespect and douchebaggery but in terms of heroic journalism. Obama is so hard to get a straight answer out of that a man’s got to get tough. Munro wasn’t heckling Obama, as Diane Sawyer said during ABC’s live coverage of the event; he was searching for the truth. Tucker wrote:

A reporter’s job is to ask questions and get answers. Our job is to find out what the federal government is up to. Politicians often don’t want to tell us. A good reporter gets the story.

Since Friday, Carlson has been on Fox News and other sympathetic news outlets to blame the “liberal media” for not understanding the important work of Munro and The Daily Caller, and to recast Obama as the villain and Munro as the hero. He told Fox News’ Sean Hannity, who suggested Munro’s timing was a tad off:

The point is that Neil Munro wants his questions answered. We can argue about how he asked it, what venue he asked it, but the bottom-line is that he’s doing what a lot of people who cover the White House aren’t doing, which is pressing for answers.

Let’s forget that The Daily Caller and Tucker Carlson in particular are considered a joke among many journalists, left and right. Let’s instead take him at his word — that Munro is serious.

Fine. Then where was his notebook?

A serious White House correspondent dogging the president and asking the tough questions no one else who is covering the White House is asking would surely have a notebook, right? I’m not the first to notice its conspicuous absence, and its absence suggests only one conclusion. Munro isn’t serious. Nor is Carlson. In fact, they are committing a host of journalistic sins, chief among them is a propaganda campaign to save what little credibility The Daily Caller had in Washington.

If he had mistimed his question, Munro could have apologized and moved on. He didn’t, because that’s not what he was doing. A journalist would never ask the President of the United States questions with his hands in his pockets. But a heckler would.

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