Trump Administration Set to Remake Reporters’ Seating Chart
The Trump administration is planning another encroachment into the day-to-day arrangements of the journalists who cover it.
It Is Happening Every Day, Every Where
The Trump administration is planning another encroachment into the day-to-day arrangements of the journalists who cover it.
The judge’s temporary restraining order will allow the federally funded broadcaster to stay open at least until March 28.
The order targeting the agencies, largely obscure entities that address issues like labor mediation and homelessness prevention, appeared to test the bounds of the president’s power.
Hundreds of readers asked about our coverage of the president. Times editors and reporters responded to some of the most common questions.
A new administration’s efforts to pressure the news media, punish political opponents and tame the nation’s tycoons evoke the early days of President Vladimir V. Putin’s reign in Russia.
The administration’s changes to the pool come at a moment when the White House is chipping away at the ability of major news organizations to cover it.
In announcing plans to handpick the reporters who can ask the president questions, the White House is breaking decades of precedent.
The wire service had sued Trump administration officials after they restricted reporters from press events citing The A.P.’s references to the Gulf of Mexico in articles.