From Kirstin McCudden <[email protected]>
Subject In 100 days, a laundry list of attacks on the media
Date April 30, 2025 1:54 PM
  Links have been removed from this email. Learn more in the FAQ.
  Links have been removed from this email. Learn more in the FAQ.
[link removed]

Press freedom aggressions in the United States, by category, for the first four months of 2025. (U.S. Press Freedom Tracker)

Dear Friend of Press Freedom,

“Just 100 days into Trump’s second term, he and his allies have launched a multipronged campaign against journalists, media organizations and their sources, pushing a narrative that questions the legitimacy of critical reporting and seeks to suppress dissenting voices.”

That’s Tracker Senior Reporter Stephanie Sugars in her roundup ([link removed]) for this week’s 100-day milestone outlining how this administration has steadily targeted the press. The targeted assault on journalists and the First Amendment, she wrote, came in four major ways — limiting media access, cutting federal funding, pursuing investigations of the media and journalists and targeting leakers.

READ THE REPORT ([link removed])

Plus, I walk you through the first 100 days of the Trump administration and what it’s meant for press freedom — so far. Click below to watch the video ([link removed]) .
[link removed]


** What else we’re reading around Trump’s 100 days
------------------------------------------------------------

From thousands of deleted datasets on federal agency websites to attempts to illegally destroy agency records, Lauren Harper, FPF’s Daniel Ellsberg chair on government secrecy, is looking at the administration’s first 100 days through a lens of government transparency. Or lack thereof. “The administration is eroding the information environment in ways this country has never seen,” Harper wrote ([link removed]) .

And take a run through the accompanying database, “The Classified Catalog ([link removed]) ,” logging news reports of government secrecy since January. You know how much we appreciate a good spreadsheet around here.
EXPLORE ‘THE CLASSIFIED CATALOG’ ([link removed])


** ‘Alarmed by rising tide of threats’
------------------------------------------------------------

In its report on the first 100 days of the administration, the Committee to Protect Journalists also recognizes the multipronged threats and challenges journalists are facing.

“We are alarmed by the rising tide of threats facing journalists and newsrooms that we have documented during the first 100 days of the second Trump administration,” said Katherine Jacobsen, CPJ’s U.S., Canada, and Caribbean program coordinator and author of the report. “The second Trump administration has taken multiple steps that curtail the media's ability to bear witness to government proceedings, and with it an avenue for covering matters of public interest.”

READ THE REPORT ON CPJ.COM ([link removed])

Attendees applaud President Donald Trump during his inauguration at the rotunda of the U.S. Capitol in Washington, D.C., on Jan. 20, 2025. (Reuters/Fabrizio Bensch)

Press advocacy group Reporters Without Borders also released a report, Trump’s war on the press: 10 numbers from the US President’s first 100 days ([link removed]) .



** Other notable updates and incidents
------------------------------------------------------------

Two California journalists — Fresno Bee reporter Thaddeus Miller ([link removed]) and Fresnoland reporter Pablo Orihuela ([link removed]) — were subpoenaed this month as part of a criminal trial. While the case was dismissed April 10, making the subpoenas moot, confusion followed. Fresno City Attorney Andrew Janz told a Bee editor that he had not reviewed or authorized the subpoenas and that they had not been issued according to protocol. Also frustrating for the reporters — the drain on resources. Orihuela told the Tracker that hours and hours of work had gone into preparation. “(So) much of our bandwidth had to get dedicated to this thing that, with all due respect, we believe never should have happened,” Orihuela said.

On April 4, a circuit court granted Mississippi Today’s request to dismiss ([link removed]) a defamation lawsuit from the state’s former governor, Phil Bryant, who sued in 2023 following the publication of a Pulitzer Prize-winning investigation into the allocation of federal funds while he was in office. Press freedom advocates and journalists everywhere have been keeping a close eye on the multi-year ordeal; Bryant’s suit sought confidential reporting notes and source information in a state with no reporter’s shield law.


** More in yearslong legal updates reported by the Tracker:
------------------------------------------------------------
* On April 9, an appeals court rejected a police union’s attempt to overturn a 2023 settlement agreement between five photojournalists ([link removed]) and the New York City Police Department, which laid extensive rules for the NYPD’s interactions with journalists. The photojournalists had sued ([link removed]) in federal court in August 2021, alleging violations of their First Amendment rights while covering social justice protests in 2020.
* A federal jury in New York City found on April 22 that The New York Times did not defame ([link removed]) former Alaska governor and vice presidential candidate Sarah Palin, the second time a jury reached this verdict. Palin sued the outlet over an editorial in June 2017.

EXPLORE THE INCIDENT DATABASE ([link removed])

Best,

Kirstin McCudden

Managing Editor, U.S. Press Freedom Tracker
DONATE TO SUPPORT THE TRACKER ([link removed])

TALK TO US:

If you’re a journalist — or know one — who’s been arrested, attacked, lost access to government events, or had equipment damaged or seized in the course of reporting, tell us about it. Submit an incident report ([link removed]) to the Tracker as we work to gather systematic information about press freedom incidents in the United States.

SUBMIT AN INCIDENT ([link removed])

Tell us what you think

Our newsletters have a new look, bringing you the same essential press freedom content in a more dynamic and interactive format. Let us know what’s working for you — and what’s not:

[email protected] (mailto:[email protected])
[link removed]
[link removed]
[link removed]


** © Copyright Freedom of the Press Foundation
Licensed under Creative Commons CC-BY 4.0 ([link removed]) where not otherwise indicated.

49 Flatbush Avenue #1017 
Brooklyn NY 11217
------------------------------------------------------------

This email was sent to [email protected] (mailto:[email protected])
why did I get this? ([link removed]) unsubscribe from this list ([link removed]) update subscription preferences ([link removed])
Freedom of the Press Foundation . 49 Flatbush Ave, #1017 . Brooklyn, NY 11217 . USA
Screenshot of the email generated on import

Message Analysis