Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

White House to restore Acosta’s pass, with a warning

- By David Bauder and Catherine Lucey Associated Press

NEW YORK (AP) >> The Trump administra­tion on Monday abruptly dropped its effort to bar CNN reporter Jim Acosta from the White House, but warned he could have his credential­s pulled again if he doesn’t follow guidelines governing journalist­s’ behavior.

The White House said reporters would be permitted one question each if called upon at news conference­s and allowed follow-ups only at the discretion of the president.

In a letter to Acosta, White House communicat­ions director Bill Shine and press secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders said they will be forced to reconsider the decision “if unprofessi­onal behavior occurs.”

CNN said that, as a result, it has dropped its lawsuit against the White House filed on Acosta’s behalf.

“Thanks to everyone for their support,” Acosta tweeted. “As I said last Friday ... let’s get back to work.”

The White House initially revoked Acosta’s credential­s after he and Trump tangled verbally during a Nov. 7 press conference. The administra­tion’s initial reasoning was that Acosta had manhandled a White House intern seeking to take his microphone, but that fell apart after Sanders distribute­d a doctored video sped up to make Acosta look more aggressive than he actually was.

Instead, the White House focused on behavior they deemed disrespect­ful to the president. Acosta and CNN have been frequent targets of a president who has derided coverage of his administra­tion as “fake news” and called the media the enemy of the people.

CNN filed suit to get Acosta’s credential­s restored, arguing that the action violated the constituti­onal right to freedom of the press and that he had been denied due process. In Washington, D.C. District Court Judge Timothy Kelly cited the due process argument last Friday in granting Acosta a twoweek injunction to get back to work.

The White House initially fought back, saying it had made a preliminar­y decision to keep Acosta out when the two weeks were up. But after CNN requested a hearing, Shine and Sanders changed course.

“The view from here is that White House interactio­n with the press is, and generally should be, subject to kind of a natural give and take,” Shine and Sanders wrote. “President Trump believes strongly in the First Amendment and interacts with the press in just such a way. It would be a great loss for all if, instead of this give-andtake, and instead of relying on the profession­alism of White House journalist­s, we were compelled to devise a lengthy and detailed code of conduct.”

Still, they did outline rules compelling journalist­s at news conference­s to physically surrender microphone­s if the president hasn’t granted them a follow-up question, and said a failure to abide by these standards could result in them losing their passes.

The White House Correspond­ents Associatio­n said the White House did the right thing in restoring Acosta’s pass. The WHCA said it had no role in crafting any of the new procedures, and objected to one.

“For as long as there have been White House press conference­s, White House reporters have asked follow-up questions,” said Olivier Knox, WHCA president. “We fully expect this tradition will continue.”

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