
Associated Press complained on Monday that the White House did not allow its photographer and reporter to attend an oval office meeting with the president of President Trump and the leader of El Salvador, Nayib Bukele, despite the court order to restore their access.
Last week, a judge with Trump’s control ordered the White House to restore access to the wire service that had blocked his legs because the wire service refused to change his “Gulf of Mexico” style guide to the “Mammy of America”.
“Our journalists were blocked today from the Oval office,” an AP spokesman told The Post. “We hope that the White House will restore the participation of AP in the pool as of today, as demonstrated in the court order.”
The order of the lower court had stopped for five days until Monday to present a time for an appeal to occur. The Trump team is appealing the ruling before the United States Court of Appeals for the DC circuit and is scheduled to face an audience on Thursday.
The American District Judge of DC, Trevor McFadden, whom Trump designated in 2017, refused to delay his order to enter into force on Tuesday despite a request from the Trump administration to give more appeal.
The AP, whose style guide is used in the drafting room throughout the country, was prohibited for the first time of the Oval office in February and has been fighting the administration in court since then.
Before Trump’s second administration, the AP enjoyed special daily access to the White House pool, a select reporters who get more intimate access to the president in events with restricted access for other reporters.
Most reporters come into the White House pool in a rotary basic, but the AP and the Reuters and Boomberg wire service colleagues used to enjoy daily access to the pool.
The Trump team changed to turn its second term and condensed what used to be three spaces for cable services in a place that revolves daily. They used it to leave space for “new media” positions.
In addition, the Trump Administration has injected ITILF into the pool assignment process, which used to be handled by the White House Correspondents Association (WHCA), and has eliminated the reporters who do not want in the mixture
AP has not yet obtained access to the rotating wire slot in the White House pool from the ban.
Last Tuesday, McFadden determined that the White House is not not the AP for all events, but that it needs to give it a similar access to provide other points of sale.
“The court simply argues that, under the first amendment, if the Government opens to some journalists, the Oval Office, the East or elsewhere, the journalists that McFadden wrote in a 41 -page ruling cannot be written.
McFadden also clarified that “The AP does not necessarily have the “first in the line every time”, the permanent press pool access enjoyed under the Whca“But he said”Nor can it be worse than its pair wire services. “
The publication contacted the White House to comment.

