Truth to Tell : Tell It Early, Tell It All, Tell It Yourself: Notes from My White House Education

On a November afternoon in 1996, Lanny Davis got a phone call that would change his life. It was from a top aide at the White House, asking him if he was interested in joining the president's senior staff. Within a few short weeks he had signed on as special counsel to the president. Fourteen months later, his tour of duty almost over, he got another phone call, this time from a Washington Post reporter who asked, "Have you ever heard the name Monica Lewinsky?"

In the time between those two phone calls, Davis received an extraordinary political education. As President Bill Clinton's chief spokesman for handling "scandal matters" he had the unenviable job of briefing reporters and answering their pointed questions on the most embarrassing allegations against the president and his aides, from charges of renting out the Lincoln Bedroom, to stories of selling plots in Arlington Cemetery, from irregular campaign fundraising to sexual improprieties. He was the White House's first line of defense against the press corps and the reporters' first point of entry to an increasingly reticent administration. His delicate task was to remain credible to both sides while surviving the inevitable crossfire.

Upon entering the White House, Davis discovered that he was never going to be able to turn bad news into good news, but he could place the bad news in its proper context and work with reporters to present a fuller picture. While some in the White House grew increasingly leery of helping a press corps that they regarded as hostile, Davis moved in the opposite direction, pitching unfavorable stories to reporters and helping them garner the facts to write those stories accurately. Most surprisingly of all, he realized that to do his job properly, he sometimes had to turn himself into a reporter within the White House, interviewing his colleagues and ferreting out information. Along the way, he learned the true lessons of why politicians, lawyers, and reporters so often act at cross-purposes and gained some remarkable and counterintuitive insights into why this need not be the case. Searching out the facts wherever he could find them, even if he had to proceed covertly, Davis discovered that he could simultaneously help the reporters do their jobs and not put the president in legal or political jeopardy.

With refreshing candor, Davis admits his own mistakes and reveals those instances where he dug a deeper hole for himself by denying the obvious and obfuscating the truth. And in a powerful reassessment of the scandal that led to the president's impeachment, Davis suggests that if the White House had been more receptive to these same hard-won lessons, the Monica Lewinsky story might not have come so close to bringing down an otherwise popular president. For as Davis learned above all, you can always make a bad story better by telling it early, telling it all, and telling it yourself.

Begin vandaag nog met dit boek voor € 0

  • Krijg volledige toegang tot alle boeken in de app tijdens de proefperiode
  • Geen verplichtingen, op elk moment annuleren
Probeer nu gratis
Meer dan 52.000 mensen hebben Nextory 5 sterren gegeven in de App store en op Google Play.

Anderen hebben ook gelezen

Sla de lijst over
  1. The Clinton Enigma: A Four and a Half Minute Speech Reveals This President's Entire Life

    David Maraniss

  2. 4.3

    Living History

    Hillary Rodham Clinton

  3. Thanks for the Memories, Mr. President : Wit and Wisdom from the Front Row at the White House

    Helen Thomas

  4. First In His Class : A Biography Of Bill Clinton

    David Maraniss

  5. Man of the World : The Further Endeavors of Bill Clinton

    Joe Conason

  6. The Man in the Middle: The Autobiography of the World Cup Final Referee

    Howard Webb

  7. 4.0

    Rainmaker : Superagent Hughes Norton and the Money Grab Explosion of Golf from Tiger to LIV and Beyond

    Hughes Norton, George Peper

  8. 3.3

    Five Days in November

    Clint Hill, Lisa McCubbin Hill

  9. A Mission from God : A Memoir and Challenge for America

    James Meredith

  10. 2.0

    President's Inaugural Speeches: From Washington to Trump (1789-2017) : The Rise and Development of America Through the Ambitions and Platforms of Elected Presidents

    George Washington, John Adams, Thomas Jefferson, James Madison, James Monroe, John Quincy Adams, Andrew Jackson, Martin Van Buren, William Henry Harrison, James Knox Polk, Zachary Taylor, Franklin Pierce, James Buchanan, Abraham Lincoln, Ulysses S. Grant, Rutherford B. Hayes, James A. Garfield, Grover Cleveland, Benjamin Harrison, William McKinley, Theodore Roosevelt, William Howard Taft, Woodrow Wilson, Warren G. Harding, Calvin Coolidge, Herbert Hoover, Franklin D. Roosevelt, Harry S. Truman, Dwight D. Eisenhower, John F. Kennedy, Lyndon Baines Johnson, Richard Milhous Nixon, Jimmy Carter, Ronald Reagan, George Bush, Bill Clinton, George W. Bush, Barack Obama, Donald John Trump

  11. First Lady's. De vrouwen in het Witte Huis : de charme en kracht van Amerika's moderne presidentsvrouwen. Van Jacqueline Kennedy tot Michelle Obama

    Kate Andersen Brower

  12. Hunting El Chapo : The Inside Story of the American Lawman Who Captured the World's Most-Wanted Drug Lord

    Andrew Hogan, Douglas Century