Last month, while writing a secret health care bill behind closed doors, Senate Republican leaders said they were proud to be part of a “transparent and open” process. They did not appear to be kidding.
And as it turns out, Republican confusion over the meaning of the word “transparency” isn’t limited to Capitol Hill. At yesterday’s press briefing, a reporter asked Deputy White House Press Secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders to explain the “plague of amnesia” affecting Donald Trump’s team when it comes to disclosing interactions with Russian nationals. It led to this exchange:
SANDERS: Every single day we do our best to give the most accurate information that we have, and we continue to do that every single day, and have offered to be as transparent as possible with all committees and anyone looking into this matter.
REPORTER: This doesn’t suggest to you a pattern of not trying to be transparent?
SANDERS: Not at all. Again, like I said, our goal is to be as transparent as humanly possible.
There was a certain irony to the circumstances: the president’s spokesperson made these comments off-camera, because the White House has decided it’s occasionally uncomfortable with the public being able to see these press briefings — which, of course, is the opposite of transparency.









