Obama Turns to Web To Take Questions from Public
Call it Round Two of the news conference, with a big Internet twist. President Barack Obama took questions from the White House press corps on Tuesday in a prime-time, East Room session that represented the most formal and time-honored of president-and-reporter interactions. On Thursday, he is taking to that same room for another public grilling — this time by regular folks armed with questions submitted via the Internet and in person, as part of a political strategy to engage Americans directly.
“It’s a way for the president to do what he enjoys doing out on the road, but saves on gas,” press secretary Robert Gibbs told reporters Wednesday.
By 9 a.m. Thursday, the White House Web site had already logged more than 100,000 questions.
Obama used the Internet to build a grass-roots movement that delivered the presidency and raised unheard-of money. Now in power, he is employing the same online network and style to speak — unfiltered — with Americans.
The president already has taken that tactic on the road, spending two days on the West Coast last week at town hall-style meetings and appearing on Jay Leno’s late-night talk show. It offered easier questions and a chance to get his message to the widest possible audience.
“It’s not a whole lot different than were we in California doing the meeting,” Gibbs said. “It’s just we’ll have people hooked up from a lot of different places all over the country, but he’ll be able to do all that from the East Room.”
Already, the White House is connecting the old-school press conference with the new-media event. It will be an easy contrast between skeptical reporters and supporter-selected questions.
Political operatives say the White House’s strategy is a way to reach a demographic key to Obama’s election.
“In the new world of online media, formal press conferences are just…
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