Voice of America's management came under fire Tuesday across party lines after reassigning a journalist who attempted to pose a question to Secretary of State Mike Pompeo.

Pompeo criticized the taxpayer-funded news outlet during a speech Monday at its headquarters, where he took questions from VOA executives appointed by President Donald Trump, but not its reporters.

VOA White House reporter Patsy Widakuswara posted a video of herself asking Pompeo as he left the building about the mob attack by Trump supporters last week on a congressional session that certified President-elect Joe Biden's win.

Pompeo did not answer or acknowledge the question. He last held a news conference on November 10, when he asserted there would be a "second Trump administration" despite Biden's election victory, although he has since acknowledged defeat.

The White House Correspondents' Association said Widakuswara was soon taken off the beat -- before Trump's visit Tuesday to Texas that she had been due to cover.

The top Democrat and Republican on the House Foreign Affairs Committee, Gregory Meeks and Michael McCaul, urged VOA to reinstate her "absent a legitimate reason."

"This is the United States of America -- we do not punish our journalists for seeking answers to their questions," they said in a joint statement.

A Voice of America journalist was reassigned after seeking to pose a question during a visit to the broadcaster by Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, seen here in March 2020
A Voice of America journalist was reassigned after seeking to pose a question during a visit to the broadcaster by Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, seen here in March 2020 AFP / ANDREW CABALLERO-REYNOLDS

"A free and fair press is at the core of our Constitution and our democracy."

Zeke Miller, president of the White House Correspondents' Association, said that Widakuswara's reassignment "is an affront to the very ideals Secretary of State Pompeo discussed in his speech."

A VOA spokesperson said the outlet "does not comment on internal personnel matters."

Pompeo in his speech accused VOA of "demeaning America" until Trump shook up its leadership, and he urged the broadcaster to tell how the United States "is the greatest nation in the history of the world and the greatest nation that civilization has ever known."

Through a whistleblower complaint, some staff members had opposed Pompeo's speech, saying it amounted to propaganda for the outgoing administration if there were no reporter questions.

Michael Pack, a conservative documentary producer appointed by Trump to oversee VOA, has voiced hope of ending a longstanding firewall against editorial interference in coverage, but the Biden team has said the president-elect plans to fire him.

The Trump White House has publicly criticized VOA for not trumpeting the administration's line and for its coverage of Covid-19 in China.