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Hey, Washington: Guess Who’s Coming to Dinner?

April 20, 2026
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Hey, Washington: Guess Who’s Coming to Dinner?

The prospect of President Trump delivering a speech at this Saturday’s White House Correspondents’ Association black-tie dinner — the first time he has not boycotted the event as commander in chief — has raised some uncomfortable questions within media and political circles.

What sort of message will this president, who has sued, threatened and demonized the independent news media, deliver when handed a microphone in front of hundreds of the nation’s most prominent journalists?

How will the Correspondents’ Association, whose mission is to support the First Amendment, respond to a president whose favorite form of speech is speech that is favorable toward him?

And which C-SPAN close-up reaction shots of guests like Wolf Blitzer will turn into memes the next day?

The televised dinner, held at the Washington Hilton, has been a cultural flashpoint before: Consider Stephen Colbert’s filleting of George W. Bush in 2006, or Seth Meyers’s 2011 riff on Mr. Trump’s presidential ambitions.

Usually, it’s the entertainer who is the most anticipated speaker of the evening. This time, it’s the president.

Mr. Trump, whose instinct for crowd work and note-perfect timing have drawn comparisons to the insult comic Don Rickles, will almost certainly take a few potshots. His press secretary, Karoline Leavitt, said on social media that the evening “will be fun!”

Melania Trump, the first lady, is also set to attend the dinner, according to the White House.

In a statement, the Correspondents’ Association said it was “happy” Mr. Trump accepted its invitation and was looking “forward to hosting him.” But the group is now facing outside pressure to deliver some kind of onstage rebuke.

More than 250 former broadcast journalists, including Dan Rather, Ann Curry and Sam Donaldson, delivered a letter on Monday urging the dinner’s organizers “to forcefully demonstrate opposition to President Trump’s efforts to trample freedom of the press.”

“These are not normal times,” the letter reads, “and this cannot be business as usual with the press standing up to applaud the man who attacks them on a daily basis.”

In the run-up to the 2024 election and then into his second term, Mr. Trump has sued ABC News, CBS News, The Wall Street Journal and The New York Times, among other news organizations. (ABC and CBS each paid $16 million to settle with the president; a judge recently dismissed Mr. Trump’s suit against The Journal; The Times is fighting Mr. Trump in court.) He has also threatened to strip TV stations of their federal broadcast licenses because of what he deemed biased coverage.

Ian Cameron, a former ABC News executive producer who organized the letter with another former ABC colleague, Lisa Stark, said that “it’s time to stand up and speak forcefully in front of the man.”

The Correspondents’ Association has previously noted that “for more than 100 years, the journalists of the White House Correspondents’ Association have enjoyed an evening with the president, a dinner that celebrates the First Amendment.”

Typically, the dinner involves speeches by Washington journalists that frequently invoke the First Amendment, and the presentation of awards for notable White House coverage. One of this year’s prizes will be presented to The Journal for its scoop about a lewd birthday card that Mr. Trump wrote to the now-disgraced financier Jeffrey Epstein in 2003. Mr. Trump denied the existence of the letter (which The Journal later published) and sued the newspaper, claiming the article was libelous; a judge dismissed the case last week.

During the years that Mr. Trump boycotted the dinner, many senior administration officials skipped the festivities, too. This year, cabinet members are expected to be out in force.

Pete Hegseth, the defense secretary, accepted an invitation to sit with CBS News journalists. Mr. Hegseth has tried to bar independent journalists from reporting inside the Pentagon and recently compared the news media to the Pharisees, a vilified sect cited in the New Testament. (Other networks are keeping quiet for now about their dinner plans.)

Mr. Trump has delivered roasts before, to varying effect. His speech in October 2024 at the Alfred E. Smith Memorial Foundation Dinner included raunchy punchlines about menstruation and infidelity, peppered with some expletives. There were groans in the room.

In January, as president, Mr. Trump made a maiden appearance at the annual dinner of the Alfalfa Club, another elite station on Washington’s black-tie circuit. He joked in his remarks that he was spending his Saturday night in a room with “people I hate” and threatened to sue his nominee for Federal Reserve chairman if he did not lower interest rates.

This Saturday, the other featured dinner speaker is Oz Pearlman, the celebrity mentalist, who has promised to entertain the crowd with “wonder, surprise and awe.”

Mr. Trump’s speech could well induce a combination of all three.

Michael M. Grynbaum writes about the intersection of media, politics and culture. He has been a media correspondent at The Times since 2016.

The post Hey, Washington: Guess Who’s Coming to Dinner? appeared first on New York Times.

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