On Monday, a federal judge refused to issue a temporary restraining order to the Associated Press to gain full access to the Trump administration, calling for a more complete briefing before making a decision.
The Associated Press accused Trump administration officials of violating First Amendment protections by denialing IT access due to style policies.
The AP refused to change the Gulf of Mexico style to “American Gulf,” which led to indefinitely banning access to oval and air force offices as in the past.
Judge Trevor McFadden told the court that there were several reasons for denying the request for a temporary restraining order. He said there were differences in the matters of the case and differences in the case law presented by the parties.
He also questioned the amount of irreparable harm the AP suffers, as news outlets have access to the same information, whether they are in the room in which it happened, he allegedly questioned the amount of irreparable harm that the AP suffers.
Associated Press lawyer Charles Tobin argued that there are factors that should be reported as not being seen on television screens and that journalists need to be in the room.
“We are not arguing that the president “must answer the questions,” Charles Tobin said, but that access cannot be denied without a legitimate process.”
The judge said there was no tendency to “act rapidly” in regards to the president’s executive office.
The AP also waited 10 days to file their case, McFadden noted.
“I can’t say that the AP has shown a chance of success here,” the judge said.
US lawyer Brian Hudak argued that the case was about whether the president could determine who has access to him. He said no one has “special access.”
“If tomorrow the White House decides to remove the White House press pool, they can do that,” Hudak said. “I don’t think that would anger the Constitution.”
President Donald Trump has signed an executive order to rename the waters of the “Gulf of America,” but the AP said he would refer to it by his original name, while acknowledging the new name that Trump chose. Ta.
Trump defended the ban on Associated Press Journalists at a press conference in Florida last week, referring directly to outlet choices about what to call the Gulf Coast.
“We just say we’re going to keep them out until they agree it’s the Gulf of America,” Trump said.
He also criticized outlet reports about him, the election and Republicans. Trump said the Associated Press hasn’t benefited them, “And I don’t think I’ve benefited them any.”
The first amendment to the US Constitution states that Congress will not pass laws that “deprive freedom of speech or the freedom of the press.”
The AP filed a lawsuit accusing the government of retaliating against press freedom, and named White House chief Susan Wills, Deputy Director Taylor Budwich and Press Secretary Caroline Leavitt, among other things.
“The target targets an attack on the AP’s editorial independence and its ability to collect and report news strikes at the heart of the initial revision,” the news agency said. “This court should correct it soon.”