WASHINGTON (AP) — Little was sacred when President
Barack Obama tossed out playful but pointed jokes Saturday night — not
even his own health care plan.
"We rolled out healthcare.gov. That
could have gone better," Obama said in remarks at the annual White
House Correspondents' Association dinner. "In 2008 my slogan was 'Yes we
can.' In 2013 my slogan was 'Control-alt-delete.'"
One the plus
side, the president said, "they did turn the launch of healthcare.gov
into one of the year's biggest movies." On a screen flashed the poster
for "Frozen."
When a video Obama introduced failed to play
properly, he asked, "Does anybody know how to fix this?" To laughter,
Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius stepped up and
said: "I got this. I see it all the time." In the wake of the problems
with the website, Sebelius has announced she is stepping down.
The
annual dinner has become a tradition in the nation's capital, promising
a black-tie evening of humor and celebrity gazing. The event once again
attracted an array of journalists, government officials, politicians
and media personalities as the association raised money for college
scholarships. The featured entertainer was comic actor Joel McHale, the
star of the NBC series "Community."
In his own stand-up routine, Obama didn't waste any time turning his barbed jokes toward the news media.
"MSNBC is here," he said. "They're a little overwhelmed. They've never seen an audience this big before."
Noting
that he had traveled to Asia recently, Obama said: "The lengths we have
to go to to get CNN coverage these days. I think they're still
searching for their table."
The president saved his sharpest jabs
for another cable news network. "The Koch brothers bought a table here
tonight, but as usual they used a shadowy right-wing organization as a
front. Hello, Fox News!"
He added: "Let's face it, Fox. You'll
miss me when I'm gone. It will be harder to convince the American people
that Hillary was born in Kenya."
Republicans didn't escape
untouched. "Washington seems more dysfunctional than ever," Obama said.
"Gridlock has gotten so bad in this town you have to wonder: What'd we
do to piss off Chris Christie so bad?"
The correspondents' association, which represents the White House press corps, celebrated its 100th anniversary.
Journalists were honored for their coverage of the presidency and national issues:
—Glenn
Thrush of Politico and Brianna Keilar of CNN won the Aldo Beckman
Award, which recognizes excellence in the coverage of the presidency.
—Peter Baker of The New York Times and Peter Maer of CBS News won the Merriman Smith Award for deadline coverage.
—Megan
Twohey of Reuters and a partnership between The Center for Public
Integrity's Chris Hamby and ABC News' Matthew Mosk and Brian Ross won
the Edgar A. Poe Award for coverage of issues of national significance.
—George E. Condon Jr. of National Journal received the first President's Award for exceptional service to the organization.
The
organization also honored the late Harry McAlpin, the first black
reporter to attend a presidential news conference, by establishing a
scholarship in his name. McAlpin had been denied membership to the WHCA
while covering the Roosevelt and Truman administrations because of his
race.
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