
- Select a language for the TTS:
- UK English Female
- UK English Male
- US English Female
- US English Male
- Australian Female
- Australian Male
- Language selected: (auto detect) - EN
Play all audios:
* WHITE HOUSE PRESS SECRETARY KAYLEIGH MCENANY SPARRED, WITHDREW, ADVANCED, AND ATTACKED IN A CONTENTIOUS BRIEFING WITH REPORTERS * SHE HAD TO APOLOGIZE FOR MISTAKING THE ACADEMIC RECORD OF
PRESIDENT TRUMP'S SUPREME COURT NOMINEE AMY CONEY BARRETT * BARRETT WASN'T A RHODES SCHOLAR, AS MCENANY SAID, BUT ATTENDED RHODES COLLEGE * 'SO MY BAD,' MCENANY SAID *
MCENANY ALSO BICKERED WITH REPORTERS ON TRUMP'S COMMENTS ON WHITE SUPREMACY AND OVER A RIVER HE CLAIMED MAIL-IN BALLOTS WERE TOSSED * AFTERWARD FOX NEWS' JOHN ROBERTS WENT ON CABLE
NETWORK TO CALL OUT MCENANY * 'SO STOP DEFLECTING. STOP BLAMING THE MEDIA. I'M TIRED OF IT,' HE SAID By EMILY GOODIN, SENIOR U.S. POLITICAL REPORTER FOR DAILYMAIL.COM
Published: 13:38 EDT, 1 October 2020 | Updated: 18:28 EDT, 9 November 2020 Press secretary Kayleigh McEnany sparred, withdrew, advanced, and attacked in a contentious briefing with reporters
on Thursday as the White House ramps up its defense strategy six weeks away from the election. McEnany bickered repeatedly with the press in her 25 minute briefing. The topics included a
river where President Donald Trump claimed absentee ballots were found and about his comments on white supremacists. And, in a rare backstep for the press secretary, she also apologized for
making a mistake about Supreme Court nominee Amy Coney Barrett's academic record. The back-and-forths from McEnany were reminiscent of President Donald Trump's posture at
Tuesday's presidential debate, when he repeatedly interrupted and talked over his Democratic rival Joe Biden. McEnany acknowledged the parallels as tension rose in the room as she
deflected questions on several controversies involving the president and reporters kept asking them. People talked over one another. McEnany attempted to regain order. The atmosphere grew
chilly as the briefing ticked on. After being asked by several reporters to clarify - in simple, straight forward language - whether or not the president condemned white supremacists, she
snapped back. 'We're not having a debate on a cable news network right now. You need to let me finish,' she said. 'It's quite funny that the media goes haywire
about interrupting in debates and then chooses to pursue that very same tactic themselves.' Fox News Chief White House correspondent John Roberts, in a stunning display of anger and
frustration, went on his cable news network - of which President Trump is a frequent viewer - to slam McEnany. 'For all of you on Twitter who are hammering me for asking the question,
I don't care because it's a question that needs to be asked and clearly the president's Republican colleagues a mile away from here are looking for an answer for it, too. So
stop deflecting. Stop blaming the media. I'm tired of it,' he said from the White House lawn with the executive mansion visible behind him. After his appearance, McEnany took to
twitter to refer to a post from his wife, ABC News correspondent Kyra Phillips, who had questioned the president on Wednesday about his white supremacist comments in the debate.
'@johnrobertsFox I would refer you to your wife's reporting from 21 hours ago... accurate reporting I cited in the White House Press Briefing,' McEnany wrote. 'Just now:
@realDonaldTrump tells me he DENOUNCES white supremacists,' Phillips wrote. Trump had come under fire from Biden and some members of his own party for failing to condemn white
supremacists when given the chance on the debate stage. 'I've always denounced any form of any of that,' the president said Wednesday on the South Lawn of the White House
before he left for Minnesota. 'Any form of that you have to denounce.' But additional questions were raised when the president didn't give a straight yes or no answer.
Roberts started off Wednesday's press briefing when he got the first question and asked: 'If I could start off, I would like to ask you for a definitive and declarative statement
without ambiguity or deflection. As the person who speaks for the president, does the president denounce white supremacists.' The briefing descended into chaos from there with McEnany
trying to answer questions reporters fired at her, both sides talking over the other repeatedly. CBS' Paula White and CNN's Kaitlan Collins also asked her to clarify President
Trump's remarks on white supremacy. 'The president has denounced it repeatedly. The president was asked this. You are contriving a story line and narrative,' McEnany told
reporters. That was in the first ten minutes. Next McEnany had to clarify her remarks about President Trump's Supreme Court nominee Amy Coney Barrett. In her opening statement at the
briefing, McEnany called Barrett a 'Rhodes scholar.' The Rhodes Scholarship is a prestigious academic award to study at Oxford University in England. Each year 32 are awarded.
Past recipients include President Bill Clinton, retired General Wesley Clark, Democratic presidential candidate Pete Buttigieg, and former National Security Adviser Susan Rice. 'She
also is a Rhodes scholar,' McEnany said of Trump's nominee. Barrett actually received her BA from Rhodes College in Tennessee. 'You said Justice Barrett was a Rhodes scholar.
I don't know if that's true,' Bloomberg's Justin Sink said to the press secretary. 'That's what I have written here,' McEnany replied. Upon being told
Barrett attended Rhodes College in Tennessee, McEnany said: 'Attended Rhodes College. So my bad.' The White House, led by President Trump, has taken a more defensive posture since
polls show him trailing Biden both nationally and in several key states. In one memorable back-and-forth, McEnany refused to name the river where President Trump claimed several mail-in
ballots had been dumped. The president has been a vocal critical of mail-in voting, saying it will lead to a 'rigged' election but has offered no proof of his allegations. Fox
Radio correspondent Jon Decker asked Trump's claim that some people found ballots in a river. He asked McEnany multiple times to name the river where the ballots were found and who
found them. She never gave a name and indicated it was actually a ditch the ballots were found in. 'Local authorities. A ditch if Wisconsin where they were found. That's what the
president was referring to. You are missing the forest for the trees,' McEnany told him. Trump said of the ballots: 'There's fraud. They found them in creeks. … They are
being dumped in rivers. This is a horrible thing for our country.' He appeared to be referring to a situation in Wisconsin where three trays of mail were found in a ditch off a
highway. The mail trays included a variety of mail and not just absentee ballots. It's also unclear if those ballots had ever been filled out. There is an ongoing investigation.
'I cover the news and I like to report accurately in the news. When the president said they found a lot of ballots in the river. Where is the river?,' Decker said to her. 'You
want to ignore the fact of the matter,' she told him. 'I got asked so many questions. Where is this river? I want to have accurate information and that's why I'm asking
you,' he replied. McEnany then pivoted to a situation in Pennsylvania under investigation where nine mail-in ballots were found in the trash, seven of which were Trump votes.
'This is what is happening here. You are ignoring the problem here. Last week in Pennsylvania you had ballots found in a ditch. That's a fact. In Wisconsin seven military ballots
marked for Trump were found cast aside,' she said. 'I don't understand the lack of journalistic curiosity on that.' 'Where is the river? That's curiosity,'
Decker said. 'I am asking you where the river is and you're not giving an answer.'