“In a free country, leaders must not be able to choose their own press corps.”
That’s the president of the White House Correspondents’ Association, Eugene Daniels, after the Trump administration moved on Tuesday to take control over the press pool. WHCA has, for decades, managed the rotation. On Wednesday, the WHCA told its members to stop using a listserv for shared reporting, and that it would no longer compile the news accounts.
Read: White House wrests control of presidential press pool from correspondents
The Trump administration’s hostile takeover of the press pool comes on the heels of its ban of The Associated Press from the pool earlier this month for using Gulf of Mexico rather than Gulf of America.
The AP, part of the White House pool since it began, filed a lawsuit on Feb. 21, calling the ban retaliatory and a violation of the First and Fifth amendments; the next hearing is March 20.
Read: AP reporters barred from White House events over editorial style policy
The White House’s first move after taking control of the press corps was to remove HuffPost and Reuters, the latter a news wire service like the AP. That leaves Bloomberg News as the only wire service still in the pool — for now, at least.
And while it’s understandable that most of us aren’t thinking about the presidential pool rotation on a day-to-day basis, we all benefit from it. The profound effects on political reporting for newsrooms everywhere will no doubt be felt in the days ahead.
In blatant prior restraint, judge orders takedown of opinion piece
On Feb. 18, a Mississippi judge ordered The Clarksdale Press Register to take down its editorial criticizing city officials after the City of Clarksdale alleged it was defamatory, without the news outlet having a chance to argue its case. After swift national backlash from First Amendment advocates (including here at Freedom of the Press Foundation), the city dropped its lawsuit. The judge vacated her order Wednesday, and the editorial was republished.
Read: Mississippi newspaper ordered to remove op-ed critical of city officials
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