HomeTop HeadlinesBiden White House SHAMED in Disturbing Cover-Up

Biden White House SHAMED in Disturbing Cover-Up

A former White House staffer has revealed that former President Joe Biden’s communications team employed what he described as “really unethical” tactics to control media coverage. These included demanding pre-approved questions and exercising strict control over which quotes journalists could use after interviews with the president.

Michael LaRosa, who served as press secretary for former First Lady Jill Biden, told “The Young Turks” host Cenk Uygur that the Biden administration regularly “bullied” journalists to portray the aging president in a more favorable light.

“They did bully a lot of journalists, and I think they would tell you that now. They wouldn’t have told you at the time,” LaRosa said during the interview.

He explained that Biden’s communications team, led by Anita Dunn, operated with a siege mentality, treating media interactions as if they were “out of a bunker” and maintaining a persistently adversarial relationship with the press corps.

LaRosa expressed confusion about the administration’s hostile approach, noting that Biden initially enjoyed substantial media goodwill following the Trump presidency. He indicated that the Biden team failed to capitalize on this advantageous starting position, instead damaging what could have been a constructive relationship with the press corps.

According to LaRosa, the questionable media management tactics dated back to Biden’s 2020 presidential campaign and continued throughout his presidency. One particularly concerning practice involved what LaRosa called “quote approval,” where a designated person on Biden’s team would dictate “what the reporter can use, what quotes they can use” following any interview with the president.

The former press aide described how junior staffers were systematically trained to control media interactions, including instructing reporters on which questions they could ask and requiring journalists to submit their questions before interviews.

LaRosa referenced an incident from the summer of 2024 when Biden staffers were discovered attempting to provide pre-written questions to radio journalists. He compared this to similar tactics he witnessed during the 2020 campaign, when junior press team members in early primary states such as New Hampshire, Iowa, and Nevada were systematically conditioned to impose restrictions on interview questions, establishing preconditions for media access.

LaRosa added that he refused to engage in these practices when handling press for former First Lady Jill Biden, drawing on his background as a former producer at NBC News.

The former White House staffer recalled instructing his colleagues to refrain from requesting specific questions from journalists before interviews with the former First Lady. He advised that while discussing general topics beforehand was acceptable, soliciting the actual questions was inappropriate. He emphasized his discomfort with the tactics employed by what he described as “the boys team” responsible for managing the president’s media interactions. 

He characterized demanding advance questions as unethical, noting that junior staffers were systematically trained to incorporate this questionable approach into their preliminary interview screening process.

His revelations mark the first time someone inside the Biden White House has confirmed these media management practices, which had been rumored but not previously verified by administration insiders.

While these tactics were intended to help control the narrative around President Biden and present him in the most favorable light possible, LaRosa argued that they ultimately backfired, particularly after Biden’s widely criticized debate performance against Trump on June 27, 2024, which highlighted concerns about the president’s mental acuity.

LaRosa reflected that over his four-year tenure, particularly during the summer of 2024, he recognized the administration’s media relations team’s fundamentally flawed instincts and how their approach ultimately undermined the president’s interests. 

He maintained that their combative and restrictive strategy toward the press corps produced the opposite of its intended effect, actively harming Biden’s public standing rather than enhancing it. According to LaRosa, despite the aggressive and punitive tactics employed against journalists covering the president, Biden’s media coverage consistently deteriorated instead of improving. 

The former press secretary asserted that this approach did not benefit the administration, as the president’s reputation, public image, trustworthiness ratings, and approval numbers remained stagnant or declined throughout his term, with no periods of positive media coverage materializing. LaRosa attributed part of this failure to the fact that the administration had “burnt and just carpet bombed his relationships with members of the press who he cared about,” reported the New York Post.

The White House’s media controls reportedly extended beyond press interactions with the president. According to a separate media report, cabinet officials’ questions for Biden during rare meetings were also screened in advance, with aides “going over questions and carefully choreographing” the interactions.

These revelations come amid broader concerns about Biden’s cognitive state during his presidency. The New York Post recently reported that dozens of executive orders bearing Biden’s signature appeared to have been signed using an autopen device, raising questions about whether the former president was fully aware of the documents he was approving. 

Missouri Attorney General Andrew Bailey has called for an investigation into whether Biden’s cognitive decline may have allowed unelected staff to implement policies without his complete understanding or approval.

LaRosa’s comments reflect a growing pattern of former Biden administration officials speaking out about internal practices following the end of his presidency. Earlier this year, Politico reported on friction between former White House aides and current staffers who had been more willing to voice disagreements with administration policies, sometimes anonymously, pointing to a generational divide in approaches to loyalty within the executive branch.

The Biden administration had previously faced criticism regarding ethical practices, particularly surrounding nepotism in hiring. In 2021, White House Press Secretary Jen Psaki defended the administration as having the “highest ethical standards” despite concerns about family members of senior Biden aides being hired for government positions.

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