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Today: March 14, 2025
Today: March 14, 2025

The White House says it 'will determine' which news outlets cover Trump, rotating traditional ones

Trump
February 25, 2025

The White House said Tuesday that its officials โ€œwill determineโ€ which news outlets can regularly cover President Donald Trump up close โ€” a sharp break from a century of tradition in which a pool of independently chosen news organizations go where the chief executive does and hold him accountable on behalf of regular Americans.

The move, coupled with the governmentโ€™s arguments this week in a federal lawsuit over access filed by The Associated Press, represented an unprecedented seizing of control over coverage of the American presidency by any administration. Free speech advocates expressed alarm over what it could mean for democracy. And three wire services that reach billions of people around the world said Wednesday that the change would harm the dissemination of reliable information about the nation's chief executive.

White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt said the changes would rotate traditional outlets from the group and include some streaming services. Leavitt cast the change as a modernization of the press pool, saying the move would be more inclusive and restore โ€œaccess back to the American peopleโ€ who elected Trump. But media experts said the move raised troubling First Amendment issues because the president is choosing who covers him.

The White House says it 'will determine' which news outlets cover Trump, rotating traditional ones
Trump

"The White House press team, in this administration, will determine who gets to enjoy the very privileged and limited access in spaces such as Air Force One and the Oval Office," Leavitt said at a daily briefing. She added at another point: โ€œA select group of D.C.-based journalists should no longer have a monopoly of press access at the White House.โ€

Leavitt said the White House will โ€œdouble downโ€ on its decision to bar the AP from many presidential events, a departure from the time-tested and sometimes contentious practice for more than a century of a pool of journalists from every platform sharing the presidents' words and activities with news outlets and congressional offices that can't attend the close-quarter events. Traditionally, the members of the pool decide who goes in small spaces such as the Oval Office and Air Force One.

โ€œItโ€™s beyond time that the White House press operation reflects the media habits of the American people in 2025, not 1925,โ€ Leavitt said.

At an event later in the Oval Office, the president linked the AP court case with the decision to take control of credentialing for the pool. โ€œWeโ€™re going to be now calling those shots," Trump said.

The White House says it 'will determine' which news outlets cover Trump, rotating traditional ones
Trump

It was unclear which legacy news outlets would be excluded or how the rotation would work. The leaders of three wire services that are permanent members of the White House pool said in a statement that any effort to limit their participation in presidential news coverage โ€œharms the spread of reliable information to people, communities, businesses and global financial markets that heavily depend on our reporting.โ€

โ€œIt is essential in a democracy for the public to have access to news about their government from an independent, free press,โ€ top editors of The Associated Press, Bloomberg News and Reuters said in a statement. โ€œWe believe that any steps by the government to limit the number of wire services with access to the President threatens that principle."

There are First Amendment implications

The change, said one expert on presidents and the press, โ€œis a dangerous move for democracy.โ€

โ€It means the president can pick and choose who covers the executive branch, ignoring the fact that it is the American people who through their taxes pay for the running of the White House, the presidentโ€™s travels and the press secretaryโ€™s salary,โ€ Jon Marshall, a media history professor at Northwestern University and author of โ€œClash: Presidents and the Press in Times of Crisis,โ€ said in a text.

The White House says it 'will determine' which news outlets cover Trump, rotating traditional ones
Trump

Eugene Daniels, president of the White House Correspondentsโ€™ Association, said the organization consistently expands its membership and pool rotations to facilitate the inclusion of new and emerging outlets.

โ€œThis move tears at the independence of a free press in the United States. It suggests the government will choose the journalists who cover the president,โ€ Daniels said in a statement. โ€œIn a free country, leaders must not be able to choose their own press corps."

The Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press called it โ€œa drastic change in how the public obtains information about its government.โ€

โ€œThe White House press pool exists to serve the public, not the presidency,โ€ Bruce D. Brown, the group's president, said in a statement.

It comes in the context of a federal lawsuit

Leavitt spoke a day after a federal judge refused to immediately order the White House to restore the AP's access to many presidential events. The news outlet, citing the First Amendment, sued Leavitt and two other White House officials for barring the AP from some presidential events over its refusal to call the Gulf of Mexico the โ€œGulf of Americaโ€ as Trump ordered. AP has said its style would retain the โ€œGulf of Mexicoโ€ name but also would note Trump's decision.

"As you know, we won that lawsuit," Trump said incorrectly. In fact, U.S. District Judge Trevor N. McFadden said the AP had not demonstrated it had suffered irreparable harm โ€” but urged the Trump administration to reconsider its two-week-old ban, saying that case law in the circuit โ€œis uniformly unhelpful to the White House.โ€

McFaddenโ€™s decision was only for the moment, however. He told attorneys for the Trump administration and the AP that the issue required more exploration before ruling. Another hearing was scheduled for late March.

The AP Stylebook is used by international audiences as well as those within the United States. The AP has said that its guidance was offered to promote clarity.

Another Trump executive order to change the name of the United Statesโ€™ largest mountain back to Mount McKinley from Denali is being recognized by the AP Stylebook. Trump has the authority to do so because the mountain is completely within the country he oversees, AP has said.

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