White House takes control of press pool that covers Trump

White House takes control of press pool that covers Trump

Entertainment

Move will benefit White House by giving access to news outlets that it sees as sympathetic, friendly

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(Web Desk) - The White House plans to determine which news outlets have access to President Donald Trump, taking control from an association of journalists after more than a century.

The changes, announced by Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt on Tuesday, mean the White House will determine which outlets participate in the "pool" that covers presidential events and shares material with other media outlets.

The rotation of pool reporters was previously determined by the White House Correspondents' Association (WHCA), which said the decision "tears at the independence of a free press".

The surprise announcement comes as the Associated Press fights to restore its access to presidential events after it was blocked.

"The White House press team in this administration will determine who gets to enjoy the very privileged and limited access in spaces such as Air Force One and the Oval Office," Leavitt said at a news briefing on Tuesday.

She said the changes would allow "new media" outlets - including streaming services and podcasts - to "share in this awesome responsibility".

"Legacy media outlets who have been here for years will still participate in the pool, but new voices are going to be welcomed in as well," she said.

"[By] deciding which outlets make up the limited press pool on a day-to-day basis, the White House will be restoring power back to the American people," Leavitt added.

Founded in 1914, the WHCA has historically handled some logistics around day-to-day coverage of the president, most notably the "pool" of reporters, which includes a camera crew from one of the five major US networks, a radio correspondent and a rotating group of print outlets.

The WHCA has long claimed the pool is beneficial both for the president - who is able to quickly disseminate news - as well as for the wider media who receive pool reports, photographs, video and audio.

Pool reporters are on-duty every day - including weekends and holidays - both at the White House or when the president is travelling.

The WHCA expressed concern that the move will benefit the White House by giving access to news outlets that it sees as sympathetic or friendly.

"This move does not give power back to the people - it gives power to the White House," Fox News reporter Jacqui Heinrich, a WHCA board member, wrote on X.

In its own statement, the WHCA said that the decision "suggests the government will choose the journalists who cover the president".

The WHCA said it was not given any notice about the White House's decision before Tuesday's news briefing.