WASHINGTON (AP) β A federal judge on Thursday ruled that the Defense Department is violating his earlier order to restore access to the Pentagon for reporters, a setback in the administration’s efforts to impede the work of journalists.
U.S. District Judge Paul FriedmanΒ sided with The New York TimesΒ for the second time in a month. He had earlier said the Pentagon’s new credential policy violated journalistsβ constitutional rights to free speech and due process. On Thursday, he said Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth’s team had tried to evade his March 20 ruling by putting in new rules that expel all reporters from the building unless guided by escorts.
βThe department simply cannot reinstate an unlawful policy under the guise of taking βnewβ action and expect the court to look the other way,β Friedman wrote.
Friedman hadΒ ordered Pentagon officialsΒ to reinstate the press credentials of seven Times reporters and stressed that his decision applies to βall regulated parties.β The Pentagon building serves as the headquarters for U.S. military operations.
Defense Department spokesperson Sean Parnell said it disagrees with the ruling and intends to appeal. Parnell said in a social media post that the department has βat all timesβ complied with judge’s orders, reinstating journalists’ credentials and issuing “a materially revised policy that addressed every concern” identified by the judge.
βThe Department remains committed to press access at the Pentagon while fulfilling its statutory obligation to ensure the safe and secure operation of the Pentagon Reservation,β he wrote.
Times attorney Theodore Boutrous said Thursdayβs ruling βpowerfully vindicates both the Courtβs authority and the First Amendmentβs protections of independent journalism.β
A dispute brewing since October
In October, reporters from mainstream news outletsΒ walked outΒ of the building rather than agree to the new rules. The TimesΒ sued the PentagonΒ and Hegseth in December to challenge the policy.
President Donald Trump has fought against the press on several levels since returning to his second term, suing The Times and Wall Street Journal, and cutting funding for public radio and television because he did not like their coverage. At the same time, he frequently talks to the media and responds to reporters who call him on his cell phone.
In a series of briefings on the Iran War, Hegseth has frequently ignored or insulted legacy media reporters let in to cover the events, while concentrating on questions from friendly conservative media.
Times attorneys accused the Pentagon of violating the judgeβs March 20 order, βboth in letter and spiritβ with its revised policy. The newspaper said that Pentagon was also trying to impose unprecedented rules dictating when reporters can offer anonymity to sources.
Friedman said that the access the Pentagon made available to permit holders βis not even close to as meaningful as the broad accessβ they previously had.
Government lawyers said the Pentagonβs revised policy fully complies with the judgeβs directives. Pentagon spokesperson Sean Parnell has said the administration would appeal Friedmanβs March 20 decision.
The Pentagon Press Association, which includes Associated Press reporters, said the Pentagonβs interim policy preserves provisions that Friedman deemed to be unconstitutional while also adding new restrictions on credential holders.
βIn effect,”Β Justice Department attorneys wrote, βPlaintiffs ask this Court to expand the Order to prohibit the Department from ever addressing the security of the Pentagon through a press credentialing policy with conditions that may address similar topics or concerns as the enjoined conditions. The Order does not say that, and this Court should not read it to say that.β
Current Pentagon press corps agreed to policy
The current Pentagon press corps is comprised mostly of conservative outlets that agreed to the policy. Journalists from outlets that refused to consent to the new rules, including from the AP, haveΒ continued reportingΒ on the military from outside the Pentagon.
Friedman, who was nominated to the bench by Democratic President Bill Clinton, said recent U.S. military operations in Venezuela and Iran underscore the need for public access to information about government activities.
βThose who drafted the First Amendment believed that the nationβs security requires a free press and an informed people and that such security is endangered by governmental suppression of political speech. That principle has preserved the nationβs security for almost 250 years. It must not be abandoned now,β the judge wrote last month.
Friedman said the challenged policy is clearly designed to weed out βdisfavored journalistsβ and replace them with those who are βon board and willing to serveβ the administration.
βThat,” he wrote, βis viewpoint discrimination, full stop.β
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