Friday's politics & policy stories

White House blocks multiple news organizations from press briefing
Sean Spicer didn't hold a press briefing today, but he did hold an off-camera gaggle with the press corps in his office. However, per The Hill, the White House did not permit a number of outlets to attend.
In: Breitbart, The Washington Times, One America News Network, Reuters, Bloomberg, NBC, ABC, FOX, and CBS (which, per Dave Lee of the BBC, agreed to share audio with the excluded press).
Out: NYT, Politico, BBC, LA Times, Buzzfeed, The Hill, The Huffington Post, Daily Mail, New York Daily News, and most of the foreign press — plus, the AP and Time boycotted the gaggle upon learning of the restrictions.

Trump tells bureaucrats to hunt down bad regulations
Following his return to CPAC, President Trump, with several chief executives from top U.S. corporations gathered around him, signed an executive order aimed at repealing and revising regulations.
Details of order: The new legislation directs federal agencies to create "regulatory reform" task forces to evaluate federal rules and recommend whether to repeal or simplify those deemed burdensome to the U.S. economy.
Earlier at CPAC, Trump vowed to put the regulatory industry "out of work and out of business," and chop "75% of the repetitive horrible regulations that hurt companies, hurt jobs, make us noncompetitive with companies overseas."

Farage tells CPAC the global populist revolution is "winning"
One of the primary faces of Brexit, former UKIP leader Nigel Farage, addressed CPAC this afternoon, bringing with him a nationalist message about last year's "great global revolution" that will soon "roll out across the rest of the West." Three quotes to sum up his message…
- "Our real friends in the world speak English, have common law, and stand by us in times of crisis."
- "2016 was the year the nation-state democracy made a comeback against the globalists and those that wish to destroy everything that we have ever been."
- "We're not against anybody based on religion or ethnicity. We're not against anybody, we're for ourselves, we're for our country, we're for our communities…and we are winning!"

Trump plays greatest hits at triumphant CPAC homecoming
Trump went to CPAC — where's he's been a speaker several times until skipping last year — and delivered a victory speech applauding his administration's accomplishments so far, and nodding to the campaign promises he vows to follow through on. The crowd ate it up, giving the president a series of standing ovations and repeatedly chanting "USA! USA! USA!"
Trump at CPAC: "I wouldn't miss a chance to talk to my friends."Trump literally skipped last year's conference: https://t.co/MHbptPcM2K pic.twitter.com/IXQg1sUqyl— Kyle Griffin (@kylegriffin1) February 24, 2017
What came up: He didn't make news, so you got the litany of his greatest hits from the campaign and early presidency, including the "fake news media" (The Clinton news network, NBC, CBS, ABC); Trump's fondness for Bernie; the wall being built "way ahead of schedule", the mess Trump claims to have inherited; the repeal/replace of Obamacare; "bad dudes" being thrown out of the country; tax reform; his accomplishments as the President-elect; the new massive military budget; the eradication of ISIS; Trump's approach to keeping terrorists out; and the 2nd Amendment. And finally: how global cooperation is good, but there's nothing as great as the U.S.A.

Trump was the king of anonymous sources
In his speech at CPAC this morning, President Trump inveighed against journalists who use anonymous sources in their stories, saying "they shouldn't be allowed to use sources unless they use somebody's name."
Oh, the irony.Trump slams unnamed sources as W.H. reveals Priebus asked FBI permission to cite anonymous officials https://t.co/Gj98JDCJNa pic.twitter.com/svwwWOgNRX— Kyle Griffin (@kylegriffin1) February 24, 2017
A few problems:
- Trump was one of the Manhattan media's most notorious anonymous sources throughout his career as a real estate showman.
- For years, Trump would call in anonymous tips about himself to the New York Post's Page Six. Two of his pseudonyms were John Barron and John Miller.
- Trump frequently used the phrase "off the record but you can use it," according to the New Yorker's Mark Singer, who profiled Trump in the late 90s.
- As the Washington Post's White House reporter Phil Rucker points out, Trump's attack on anonymous sources this morning came shortly after his aides held an anonymous briefing with the press.

Parents of transgender children ask Trump to meet face-to-face
A group of parents of transgender children — all members of the Human Rights Campaign's Parents for Transgender Equality Council — are asking President Trump, Education Secretary Betsy DeVos and Attorney General Jeff Sessions for a face-to-face meeting to talk about the decision to rescind Obama's transgender bathroom guidance.
This is a follow-up to their earlier letter, signed by more than 1,000 parents, asking the administration to preserve the guidelines.

Today's newsmakers at CPAC
- 8:25am — WH adviser Sebastian Gorka on a panel about WWIII
- 10:20am — President Trump
- 11:55am — Nigel Farage on Brexit
- 2:30 pm — Rep. Kevin Brady on tax reform
- 7:30ish pm — NSC deputy KT McFarland

Trump attacks FBI on leakers
Trump took to Twitter this morning to reprimand the FBI:
Why this matters: Last night, CNN published a story on Trump's chief of staff, Reince Priebus, asking the FBI to talk to reporters and shoot down Russia stories. The FBI refused.

Coming attraction: the "Shadow Cabinet"
Coming Monday — from VERY well-known names in Democratic politics, progressive activism, and academia — an effort to rebut Trump Administration tweets, statements and actions in real time:
Said a source behind the movement: "@ShadowingTrump is a 'Shadow Cabinet' of policy experts debunking POTUS 45 and his appointees ... Sort of an online 'Justice League.' ... [W]e'll be a comprehensive, one-portal stop of 'Citizen Secretaries' — ex-officials and scholars who will comment agency-by-agency ... on issues both in headlines & within the bureaucracy."
From the pitch: "Please follow us on Twitter ... unless you think everything is ok."
The "Shadow Cabinet" Twitter feed is locked until Monday.

We could lose Cold War II
A DEFCON warning in next week's issue of The New Yorker ... "Active Measures" — by Evan Osnos in D.C., Editor David Remnick in NYC and Joshua Yaffa in Moscow — on fears of the neutering of NATO and the decoupling of America from European security: "If that happens, it gives Putin all kinds of opportunities."
Strobe Talbott, who was President Bill Clinton's leading adviser on Russia and the region, and now is Brookings President:
"There is a very real danger not only that we are going to lose a second Cold War — or have a redo and lose — but that the loss will be largely because of a perverse pal-ship, the almost unfathomable respect that Trump has for Putin."

Priebus asked FBI to shoot down Russia stories; FBI said 'no'
White House Chief of Staff Reince Priebus asked the FBI to "talk to reporters on background" to dispute reports linking the Trump campaign to Russia, CNN reports. The FBI declined. A White House official said the request was made only after the FBI said the reports were questionable.
CNN does an excellent job explaining why this matters:
The direct communications between the White House and the FBI were unusual because of decade-old restrictions on such contacts. Such a request from the White House is a violation of procedures that limit communications with the FBI on pending investigations.






