}

A U.S. judge on Friday temporarily restored White House press credentials to CNN correspondent Jim Acosta, which were revoked following a contentious press conference with President Donald Trump, saying there should be a due process in place for limiting a journalistโ€™s access to the White House.

Trump-CNN-Acosta
CNN White House correspondent Jim Acosta leaves a hearing on CNN’s lawsuit against the Trump administration seeking the reinstatement of Acosta’s White House press credentials at U.S. District Court in Washington, U.S., November 14, 2018. REUTERS/Kevin Lamarque

U.S. District Judge Timothy Kelly, who is hearing CNNโ€™s lawsuit challenging to the revocation, ordered the White House to restore Acostaโ€™s press pass while the case is pending.

The White House revoked the reporterโ€™s press pass last week after a heated exchange between him and President Trump and a brief altercation with a press aide at a news conference. Acosta, CNNโ€™s chief White House correspondent, is the first reporter with a so-called hard pass to be banned.

CNN sued President Trumpย and other White House officials on Tuesday over the revocation. Kellyโ€™s ruling was the first legal skirmish in that lawsuit. It has the immediate effect of sending Acosta back to the White House, pending further arguments and a possible trial. The litigation is in its early stages, and a trial could be months in the future.

According to a Washington Post report, Kelly, whom Trumpย appointed to the federal benchย last year, handed down his ruling two days after the network and government lawyers argued over whether the president had the power to exclude a reporter from the White House.

In his decision, Kelly ruled that Acostaโ€™s First Amendment rights overruled the White Houseโ€™s right to have orderly press conferences. Kelly said he agreed with the governmentโ€™s argument that there was no First Amendment right to come onto the White House grounds. But, he said, once the White House opened up the grounds to reporters, the First Amendment applied.

He also agreed with CNNโ€™s argument that the White House did not provide due process. He said the White Houseโ€™s decision-making was โ€œso shrouded in mystery that the government could not tell meโ€ฆ. who made the decision.โ€ The White Houseโ€™s later written arguments for banning Acosta were belated and werenโ€™t sufficient to satisfy due process, Kelly said.

White House press secretary Sarah Sanders announcedย Acostaโ€™s โ€œindefiniteโ€ suspensionย last week after the confrontation at the press conference. Trump and Sanders have hadย several run-ins with Acosta stretching back to before Trump became president.

Acosta watched Fridayโ€™s proceedings from the courtroom in Washington, joined by a team of attorneys includingย Ted Olson, a former solicitor general in George W. Bushโ€™s administration, andย Ted Boutrous, a star litigator and media-law specialist.

CNN has argued that the ban on Acosta violated his First Amendment rights because it amounts to โ€œviewpoint discriminationโ€–that is, the president is punishing him for statements and coverage he didnโ€™t like. The network has also said the action violates Acostaโ€™s Fifth Amendment right to due process because his exclusion follows no written guidelines or rules and has no appeal or review procedures.

CNN had requested โ€œemergencyโ€ relief from the judge, arguing that Acostaโ€™s rights were being violated with each passing hour.

Until the White Houseโ€™s action last week, no reporter credentialed to cover the president had ever had a press pass revoked.

A government lawyer, James Burnham,ย argued in a hearingย before Kelly on Wednesday that the president was within his rights to ban any reporter from the White House at any time, just as he excludes reporters from interviews in the Oval Office. He said Acosta could report on the president โ€œjust as effectivelyโ€ by watching the president on TV or by calling sources within the White House. He also said CNN wouldnโ€™t be injured by Acostaโ€™s exclusion since CNN has dozens of other journalists credentialed for the White House.

Burnham also explained that Trumpโ€™s rationale for Acostaโ€™s ban was his โ€œrudenessโ€ at last weekโ€™s press conference, in effect arguing that Acostaโ€™s conduct, not his right to free speech, was the relevant issue.

The assertions drew a rebuttal from CNNโ€™s lawyer, Ted Boutrous, who described the ban on the reporter as arbitrary, capricious and unprecedented. He said White House reporters need access to the premises to meet with sources and to report on untelevised โ€œgaggles,โ€ impromptu discussions with press aides and other officials, so that banning a reporter from the grounds harms his or her ability to do their job.

Trump-Acosta
Trump and Acosta squared off at Nov. 7 press conference. (Jim Watson/AFP/Getty Images)

Media organizations have been alarmed by the White Houseโ€™s treatment of Acosta, saying that revoking his โ€œhard passโ€ to enter the White House is a threat to other journalists who might be similarly banned.ย Trump has suggested other reportersย could face a similar fate if they displease him in some unspecified way. Thirteen news organizations, including The Washington Post and Fox News, said Wednesday they wouldย jointly file a friend-of-the-court briefย supporting CNNโ€™s position.

Theย White House Correspondents Association, which represents journalists in negotiations over access to the president, filed its own brief on Thursday that urged the court โ€œto roundly reject the presidentโ€™s dangerous legal position.โ€ It disputed the governmentโ€™s claim that the president has โ€œabsolute, unbridled discretion to decide who can report from inside the White House.โ€

During the presidential campaign in 2015 and 2016, Trumpย banned more than a dozen news organizationsย from his rallies and public events, including The Washington Post. But he said he wouldnโ€™t do something similar as president. Last week, he went back on that statement.

Trumpโ€™s 2020 re-election campaign has used the CNN lawsuit to drum up contributions, portraying the suit as evidence of โ€œliberal biasโ€–an assertion Boutrous brought up on Wednesday to demonstrate that Trump had political reasons for banning Acosta.

โ€œCNN is SUING President Trump, Sarah Huckabee Sanders, a Secret Service agent, and other White House officials…โ€ย the fundraising email says. โ€œ…All because they REVOKED Jim Acostaโ€™s press badge after his continuous grandstanding and inappropriate refusal to yield to other reporters.

โ€œPresident Trump will NOT put up with the mediaโ€™s liberal bias and utter disrespect for this Administration and the hardworking Americans who stand with us.โ€

*Credit: Reuters and Washington Post

 


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