Look to the western sky
We’re all watching the flurry of executive orders from the White House that began Jan. 20, including pardoning Jan. 6 rioters who, among other offenses, attacked journalists. But we’re also keeping an eye on the state level, where lawmakers and the reporters who cover them dove into new legislative sessions this month.
In Topeka, Kansas, reporters found out just three days before the 2025 session began that their access was drastically reduced. Kansas House Speaker Dan Hawkins banned journalists from reporting from the floor of the chamber and instead moved them to a gallery above the back of the chamber.
By eliminating press box access, Hawkins overturned a long-standing practice that gave reporters access to the chamber floor and the elected representatives working there. It mirrors changes the Kansas Senate made in 2022, when it also barred journalists from the chamber floor, citing space concerns.
For years now, we’ve been tracking similar rule changes across U.S. statehouses limiting press access. In 2022, Iowa and Utah reduced press access to their chamber floors, and in 2023, the Texas Senate and the New York State Assembly extended pandemic-era rules to keep reporters from the floor.
Other notable updates and incidents
Nearly nine months after her arrest while covering a pro-Palestinian demonstration at Oregon University, trespassing charges against independent journalist Alissa Azar were dropped on Jan. 23. Azar told the Tracker that she was relieved that the case had ended, but that months of fighting the charges had been “profoundly humiliating, grossly invasive, and infuriating.”
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