NEW YORK (AP) — President Donald Trump’s executive order was clear: The Gulf of Mexico was out after hundreds of years. The Gulf of America was its name now.
But The Associated Press decided to keep the original name for its style and also note that Trump had changed it. Trump limited the global news outlet’s access to some presidential events. The AP sued.
A federal judge hearing the case observed that it seemed an obvious constitutional problem, calling Trump’s actions “pretty clearly viewpoint discrimination.”
What is viewpoint discrimination?
Viewpoint discrimination is when the government treats speech differently on the basis of the words used or the viewpoint expressed. It’s often an important concept in trademark law and free-speech disputes because it can violate the First Amendment’s protections.
Observers said the judge, a Trump appointee and former law enforcement officer, left the impression that he saw it as a weak spot in Trump’s case. Discriminating against someone for the content of his speech, or writing, is one of the highest hurdles in constitutional law.
Allowing government to favor one type of speech has a much higher bar than controlling speech for other reasons, like public safety, said Professor Joseph A. Tomain of the Indiana University school of law.
“The judge definitely indicated that he had concerns that this might violate the First Amendment.” said Kevin Goldberg, a vice president at Freedom Forum. “The government can’t choose which side it prefers to favor or disfavor.”
That’s why viewpoint discrimination is one of the rarest types of case to actually go to court.
Rare convergence of developments
Now, Trump is being accused of it as he challenges a century of press tradition.
Since the early 20th century, an independent pool of news organizations has documented the president in small public spaces such as the Oval Office and Air Force One. Trump’s administration said that, from now on, the White House would determine the pool’s makeup.
Speaking after the federal court hearing, White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt said the administration “will determine who gets to enjoy the very privileged and limited access” to the president and would add new voices and reporters into it while rotating out “traditional” media like wire services and major newspapers. That was seen as a sign that it is trying to avert accusations of viewpoint discrimination.
Lawyers see a fight looming over the question of journalists’ access to the president.
“You’ve never had the Supreme Court deciding a case about journalist access to the White House or even to the president,” Goldberg said. “This is sort of new ground.”
Reshaped territory
The possibility of access being remade by a conservative president comfortable with modern media technology has prompted strong reactions from news-media groups that tried to show a unified face to the administration.
“Conditioning pool access to White House events on the editorial decisions of any news organization violates First Amendment principles,” the Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press wrote. “All news organizations covering the White House are negatively affected when one peer outlet is singled out.”
However, settings limited by space — like Air Force One and the Oval Office — give the president more discretion.
“It’s not an open-and-shut question,” said Eugene Volokh, a senior fellow at Stanford University and a law professor at UCLA. “That’s the argument that the Trump administration makes and I think it’s a plausible one. He’s entitled to say, ‘I just don’t want to talk to you.'”
See also: News Access to Press Events
Why the AP’s White House access should be restored
Laurie Kellman in London and Matt Sedensky in New York contributed.
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