San Francisco Chronicle

Judge delays ruling on reporter

- By Ashraf Khalil Ashraf Khalil is an Associated Press writer.

WASHINGTON — A federal judge has delayed his decision on whether to order the Trump administra­tion to return the White House press credential­s of CNN reporter Jim Acosta.

U.S. District Court Judge Timothy Kelly was expected to announce his decision Thursday afternoon but delayed the announceme­nt until Friday morning.

Kelly, a Trump appointee, heard arguments Wednesday from lawyers representi­ng CNN and the Justice Department. The news network is seeking an immediate restrainin­g order that would force the White House to hand back Acosta’s credential­s.

Acosta has clashed repeatedly with Trump and press secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders in briefings over the past two years. But the dynamic devolved into a near-shouting match during a combative news conference last week following midterm elections in which Republican­s lost control of the House.

Acosta refused to give up a microphone when the president said he didn’t want to hear anything more from him. Trump called Acosta a “rude, terrible person.”

The White House quickly announced that Acosta’s White House access would be revoked.

The CNN lawsuit calls the revocation “an unabashed attempt to censor the press and exclude reporters from the White House who challenge and dispute the President’s point of view.”

Justice Department lawyer James Burnham argued that Acosta was guilty of “inappropri­ate grandstand­ing” and deserved to lose his access over “his refusal to comply with the general standards of a press conference.”

Burnham said that the White House is essentiall­y Trump’s home and office and that the president has some right to decide who can and can’t be there.

“There’s no First Amendment right to access the White House grounds,” Burnham said.

Burnham also pointed out that CNN has dozens of other staffers with White House credential­s, so excluding Acosta would not harm the network’s coverage.

The network’s lawyer, Theodore Boutrous, contended that Acosta was being singled out for his White House coverage, not his alleged rudeness during a news conference.

“The White House has made very clear that they don’t like the content of the reporting by CNN and Jim Acosta,” Boutrous said. “Rudeness really is a code word for ‘I don’t like you being an aggressive reporter.’ ”

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