In December 2018, Donald Trump met with congressional leaders in the Oval Office, where the president vowed to take ownership of an upcoming government shutdown. For Republicans, Trump’s comments were an immediate and politically costly misstep.
Except, he didn’t see it that way. In fact, the Washington Post later reported that the president was delighted with the meeting — because a lot of people saw it. “This is why I was so great on ‘The Apprentice,’” Trump told then-House Speaker Paul Ryan (R-Wis.) the morning after the White House gathering. The president added that the television ratings for the meeting were “great.”
It was a reminder about how Trump often sees current events: if he’s the center of attention, the cameras are on him, and people are tuned in, little else matters.
With this in mind, the New York Times reported last week that the White House has brought back daily press briefings, most of which feature the president himself at the podium, which are drawing significant audiences. “President Trump is a ratings hit,” the article began, “and some journalists and public health experts say that could be a dangerous thing.”
The point of the article, of course, is that the White House briefings are inherently problematic: Americans who tune in are confronted with a president who peddles false claims, touts untested medicinal treatments, unfairly blames others for his administration’s mistakes, and makes promises he can’t keep.
But the Republican saw the first six words of the article — “President Trump is a ratings hit” — and chose not to care about the rest. Asked yesterday about the concerns about his briefings, Trump initially spent some time talking about CNN’s ratings before focusing on his own.









