CNN sues over barring of reporter, White House vows vigorous defense

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WASHINGTON, Nov 14, 2018 (BSS/AFP) – A federal judge will hold a hearing
Wednesday on CNN’s lawsuit against Donald Trump’s administration alleging the
White House violated correspondent Jim Acosta’s constitutional rights by
revoking his press credentials following a heated exchange with the US
president.

The White House dismissed CNN’s complaint as “grandstanding” and vowed to
“vigorously defend” against the lawsuit.

The row on live national television and Acosta’s resulting banishment
triggered a wave of accusations that Trump is stifling the free press, and
marked a sharp escalation in tensions between the president and CNN, a
frequent target of his ire.

“The wrongful revocation of these credentials violates CNN and Acosta’s
First Amendment rights of freedom of the press, and their Fifth Amendment
rights to due process,” the news network said in a statement announcing the
lawsuit filed Tuesday in federal court in Washington.

CNN asked for a temporary restraining order, warning that Acosta’s
credential suspension could set a precedent for future attacks on other
outlets.

“If left unchallenged, the actions of the White House would create a
dangerous chilling effect for any journalist who covers our elected
officials,” it said.

US District Judge Timothy Kelly ordered the Trump administration to respond
by 11:00 am (1600 GMT) on Wednesday and set a hearing for 3:30 pm.

Kelly, a former chief counsel for the US Senate Judiciary Committee, was
appointed to the bench by Trump last year.

The White House had suspended Acosta’s hard pass after he sparred at a news
conference with the president, who demanded that the reporter yield the
microphone and called him a “rude, terrible person” when he did not
immediately comply.

Acosta pushed back with more questions and a White House intern tried to
take the microphone from the CNN journalist — an incident the Trump
administration characterized as misconduct against the woman.

– ‘Grandstanding’ –

Hours later, White House press secretary Sarah Sanders announced Acosta’s
hard pass had been suspended, a rare if not unprecedented move that she
justified by claiming the reporter was inappropriately “placing his hands” on
the intern.

Sanders then tweeted a video that she said backed up her narrative of the
incident — but analysts said the footage was sped up to make it appear that
Acosta struck the intern.

The press secretary on Tuesday dismissed the CNN legal complaint as
“grandstanding,” vowing that the White House would “vigorously defend against
this lawsuit.”

She alleged that Acosta “physically refused to surrender a White House
microphone to an intern,” softening the earlier misconduct accusation and
then casting blame on the journalist for his persistent questioning.

“The First Amendment is not served when a single reporter, of more than 150
present, attempts to monopolize the floor,” the press secretary said in a
statement.

“If there is no check on this type of behavior, it impedes the ability of
the President, the White House staff and members of the media to conduct
business.”

CNN lawyer Ted Boutrous said the White Houses’s suspension of the press
pass made “clear it was based on the content of the reporting.”

“CNN’s argument is very straightforward,” the lawyer told the US network.
“We can’t have the White House tossing people out because they don’t like
what they are saying or what they are reporting.”

“That is what happened. That is the First Amendment.”

– ‘Unconstitutional’ –

Both Acosta and CNN are plaintiffs in the lawsuit, which targets six
defendants: Trump, Sanders, White House chief of staff John Kelly, deputy
chief of staff William Shine, the Secret Service and its director along with
the agent who took the banned journalist’s credentials.

In addition to requesting the return of the journalist’s pass, the network
is seeking “a declaration that the revocation of Acosta’s press was
unconstitutional,” according to the filing.

The White House Correspondents’ Association welcomed CNN’s lawsuit, saying
“revoking access to the White House complex amounted to disproportionate
reaction to the events.”

“The president of the United States should not be in the business of
arbitrarily picking the men and women who cover him,” WHCA president Olivier
Knox said in a statement.

Trump is no stranger to fights with the press: the president regularly
labels unfavorable coverage as “fake news” and has threatened to ban certain
media organizations from his events.

The New York-based Knight First Amendment Institute, which sued Trump and
his communications team after the president blocked several people on Twitter
who were critical of his policies, called CNN’s lawsuit “entirely justified.”

“It would be terrible for the public, and for our democracy, if reporters
questioning the president had to operate under an ever-present threat of this
kind of retaliation,” said the institute’s executive director Jameel Jaffer.