Nico Pitney
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
Nico Pitney is Senior Director at More Perfect Union.[1] He was formerly with NowThis, Huffington Post, and Center for American Progress, where he was "managing editor of ThinkProgress".[2]
Nico Pitney was born in Tokyo.[3]
JournoList
Nico Pitney, of the Huffington Post, was an identified member of JournoList - an email group of approximately 400 "progressive" and socialist journalists, academics and "new media" activists.
JournoList members reportedly coordinated their messages in favor of Barack Obama and the Democrats, and against Sarah Palin and the Republican Party. JournoList was founded in 2007 and was closed down in early 2010.[4]
Obama Calls on Nico Pitney
Barack Obama called on Nico Pitney in "what appeared to be a coordinated exchange".[5]
- In what appeared to be a coordinated exchange, President Obama called on the Huffington Post's Nico Pitney near the start of his press conference and requested a question directly about Iran.
- He then noted that the site had solicited questions from people in the country “who were still courageous enough to be communicating online.”
- “Under which conditions would you accept the election of Ahmadinejad, and if you do accept it without any significant changes in the conditions there, isn't that a betrayal of the — of what the demonstrators there are working towards?”
- Reporters typically don’t coordinate their questions for the president before press conferences, so it seemed odd that Obama might have an idea what the question would be. Also, it was a departure from White House protocol by calling on The Huffington Post second, in between the AP and Reuters.
- CBS Radio's Mark Knoller, a veteran White House correspondent, said over Twitter it was "very unusual that Obama called on Huffington Post second, appearing to know the issue the reporter would ask about."
- According to POLITICO's Carol Lee, The Huffington Post reporter was brought out of lower press by deputy press secretary Josh Earnest and placed just inside the barricade for reporters a few minutes before the start of the press conference.
- (This post was rewritten shortly after the exchange and updated in the text. Initially, I wrote the exchange was "clearly coordinated," but have since put the question to a Huffington Post spokesperson and the White House for more elaboration. See updates: There was discussion between the White House and Pitney about asking an Iran question).
- UPDATE: Deputy press secretary Bill Burton responds: "We did reach out to him prior to press conference to tell him that we had been paying attention to what he had been doing on Iran and there was a chance that he’d be called on. And, he ended up asking the toughest question that the President took on Iran. In the absence of an Iranian press corps in Washington, it was an innovative way to get a question directly from an Iranian."
- UPDATE 2: Knoller, again via Twitter: "Huffington Post's Nico Pitney says the WH called him this morning and invited him to ask his Iran questions at the news conference."
References
- ↑ About (accessed August 23, 2023)
- ↑ [https://web.archive.org/web/20141227044956/http://www.huffingtonpost.com/nico-pitney/ Nico Pitney (accessed August 25, 2023)
- ↑ [https://www.queerty.com/nico-pitney-knows-politics-20080307 Nico Pitney (accessed August 25, 2023)
- ↑ [1] Free Republic, July 26, 2010, accessed July 30, 2010
- ↑ [https://web.archive.org/web/20090626042342/https://www.politico.com/blogs/michaelcalderone/0609/Obama_calls_on_HuffPost_for_Iran_question.html Obama calls on HuffPost for Iran question UPDATE (accessed August 25, 2023)