The three permanent wires in the White House pool, The Associated Press, Bloomberg News and Reuters, have long worked to ensure that accurate, fair and timely information about the presidency is communicated to a broad audience of all political persuasions, both in the United States and globally. Much of the White House coverage people see in their local news outlets, wherever they are in the world, comes from the wires.
It is essential in a democracy for the public to have access to news about their government from an independent, free press. We believe that any steps by the government to limit the number of wire services with access to the President threatens that principle. It also harms the spread of reliable information to people, communities, businesses and global financial markets that heavily depend on our reporting.
Julie Pace, Executive Editor, The Associated Press
John Micklethwait, Editor-in-Chief, Bloomberg
Alessandra Galloni, Editor-in-Chief, Reuters
Bloomberg Industry Group seeks an associate reporter. Performs general assignment and beat reporting and write…
HuffPost has named Katherine Speller as its new senior editor of family and relationships. Speller…
Jeff John Roberts of Fortune examines the growth strategy of Blockworks, which is looking to combine…
Harriet Clarfelt has also been appointed U.S. asset management correspondent at the Financial Times to…
Senior corporate finance correspondent Eric Platt has been named U.S. investment editor at the Financial Times. Platt…
CNBC on Monday acknowledged that it aired a banner containing unconfirmed information about President Trump’s…