Under Fire: Reporting from the Front Lines of the Trump White House by April Ryan
“Under Fire” is a solid book that sheds light into the Trump White House. Veteran White House reporter April Ryan takes the reader behind-the-scenes and exposes an administration’s unprecedented disregard for the truth. This interesting 193-page book includes the following nine chapters: 1. The Rebuke, 2. Healthcare Despair, 3. Becoming the Story, 4. Twitter Trouble, 5. Enemy of the People, 6. Examining the Black Agenda, 7. Education for All?, 8. Divided Nation, and 9. Women at Work.
Positives:
1. A well-written, concise book. Ryan writes with clarity.
2. I’m always interested in the behind-the-scenes stories from respected reporters.
3. This is a page-turner. Ryan succeeds in keeping the reader interested. “During my career at the White House, nothing has compared to my experiences in the Trump administration.”
4. Readers will gain a better understanding of Ryan’s perspective on reporting. “I bring up questions related to race to inform the public so that things can improve, not worsen. I’m not a race baiter, but I hope to be a race informer.”
5. Interesting insights. “You may not be aware that as Black journalists and the Black media, we are often not given access to Republican candidates. Our community is usually written off because it’s not considered worthwhile to court our vote.”
6. Enlightening black history. “Throughout history, every time we have made significant gains, there has been a fierce and ferocious backlash from those who have resented it. Whether it was the end of reconstruction, whether it was Jim Crow or whether it was the Tea Party or Donald Trump movement against President Obama.”
7. Trump’s past exposed. “Trump was the focus of articles on his bad housing practices toward Blacks. In 1973, the U.S. Justice Department sued the young real estate businessman, his father, Fred, and Trump Management for housing bias. The Trumps were sued for allegedly not renting apartments to African Americans in one of the Trump developments.”
8. Covers the healthcare despair. “Obamacare is meant as a holistic approach to get people well. It is also meant to cut the number of folks using the emergency room as their doctor, which was creating extremely high hospital bills.”
9. Good use of facts. “A Harvard University study found that medical expenses were the leading cause for personal bankruptcy filings at 62 percent.”
10. Goes into details about reluctantly becoming the story. “Omarosa’s attempts to smear me with her lies started in the summer of 2016 and continued through 2017.”
11. White House history. “According to the White House Historical Association and Dr. Martha Joynt Kumar, White House briefings began in the 1800s, conducted by the presidential private secretary, a position analogous to the chief of staff today. It was back in 1913 when Woodrow Wilson held the very first press conference, over one hundred years ago!”
12. The Trump Standard. “He holds himself to the Trump standard. Anyone else must stand in the center of their mess and face public shaming and more. But when it comes to being Donald J. Trump, the standard rules of morals, ethics, and just common decency do not apply. They are actually repelled by him.”
13. The enemy of the people, the media. “The damage was done when Donald Trump said the press was the enemy of the people. It’s a deeply anti-American comment he made. It’s a disregard for the First Amendment and it puts journalists at risk around the world. It’s the kind of language that Donald Trump uses about the press. It’s what you get from dictators.”
14. Examines the Black Agenda. “On March 22, 2017, the Congressional Black Caucus (CBC) meeting took place in the Cabinet Room in the West Wing of the White House. This group represents 78 million Americans, with 17 million of them being African Americans. Their top five issues were hovering overhead: criminal justice; economic opportunity, expanding the economic pie for minority businesses; education and job training; real crime; and healthcare.”
15. Trump’s racism exposed. “The president was accused of repeatedly saying that he did not want people from “shithole countries” like Haiti, El Salvador, and all of Africa coming to America. However, he clearly stated that he wanted people from Norway. It was the White Meat versus Dark Meat discussion—not over poultry, but people.”
16. Enlightening history on Historical Black Colleges (HBCUs). “HBCUs were born, and supporters of the schools worked for them to thrive. The mission was not to divide but to bridge the divides.”
17. Issues of division. “Here’s a stunning yet documented fact that is grossly under-reported. The Center for American Progress published an article on January 12, 2018, titled “The Top 3 Things You Need to Know about Black Immigrants in the United States in 2018.” The report used data from a 2016 American Community Survey. The findings were that the 3.7 million Black immigrants in the United States have high rates of education and employment. The report shows that Black immigrants are more likely than all other immigrants to have some college education, or at least an associate’s degree (29 percent compared with 19 percent). The education attainment rates for Black immigrants are like those for native-born Americans at 32 percent and 31 percent, respectively.”
18. The power of women. “In another amazing example of the power of women, particularly Black women, on December 12, 2017, polling showed that Roy Moore was defeated in the contentious Alabama Senate race, primarily due to the turnout of women of color.”
Negatives:
1. No supplementary material to speak of. No charts, graphs, bibliography, timeline, not even notes.
2. Sometimes Ryan gets into gossip mode.
3. The Omarosa story becomes repetitive and tiresome.
4. Does appear to be one sided. Conservatives will dislike.
In summary, this is a very easy and brief read. Ryan writes with clarity and makes keen observations. She provides interesting insights in what it’s like to be a veteran female black White House reporter under a Trump administration. As a result of her insights I was able to get a better appreciation on her reporting angle. Biggest shortcoming is the lack of supplementary material. A quick interesting read, I recommend it.
Further suggestions: “Presidency in Black and White” by the same author, “The Enemy of the People” by Jim Acosta, “The Threat” by Andrew McCabe, “The Man Who Sold America: Trump and the Unraveling of the American Story” by Joy-Ann Reid, “Enemy of the People” by Marvin Kalb, “Unbelievable” by Katy Tur, and “Trumpocracy” by David Frum.