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Judge won鈥檛 take further steps to enforce his order in AP case against Trump administration

WASHINGTON (AP) 鈥 A federal judge who ordered the Trump administration to stop blocking The Associated Press from presidential events refused Friday to take immediate steps to get White House officials to comply 鈥 an incremental development in a two-
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White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt speaks with reporters in the James Brady Press Briefing Room at the White House, Wednesday, April 16, 2025, in Washington, as Patty Morin, mother of Rachel Morin listens. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon)

WASHINGTON (AP) 鈥 A federal judge who to stop blocking The Associated Press from presidential events refused Friday to take immediate steps to get White House officials to comply 鈥 an incremental development in a two-month dispute between the global news agency and administration officials over access.

The case, which has significant free-speech implications under the U.S. Constitution's First Amendment, centers on the government blocking AP鈥檚 access to cover events because the outlet in its reports.

U.S. District Judge Trevor N. McFadden, who handed the AP a victory last week in its efforts to end the ban, said it鈥檚 too soon to say that President Donald Trump is violating his order 鈥 as the AP suggests.

鈥淲e are not at the point where we can make much of a determination one way or another,鈥 said McFadden, ruling from the bench. 鈥淚 don't intend to micromanage the White House.鈥

The AP's lawyer, Charles Tobin, wouldn't comment about the judge's decision after the proceedings. The White House issued no immediate comment.

The decision comes after a new press policy at the White House

For two months, the White House has essentially banned AP reporters and photographers from their traditional spot covering events in smaller spaces like the Oval Office and Air Force One. The AP says it鈥檚 a violation of its free-speech rights, enshrined in the First Amendment, to punish a news outlet for an editorial decision 鈥 an argument McFadden has endorsed.

In response, the White House this week that occasionally lets the AP and other wire services into events it used to routinely cover at all times.

Since McFadden鈥檚 ruling took effect, an AP photographer was allowed into the Oval Office on Thursday after three days of being blocked. A reporter has yet to be allowed back in, but the White House said an AP reporter will be part of the coverage rotation on Saturday 鈥 when reporters will follow Trump in a van to where he plans to play golf.

In court, Tobin said the new policy is gamesmanship designed to diminish the outlet鈥檚 influence. 鈥淲e think that the new policy really is a thumb in the nose at The Associated Press and this court,鈥 he told McFadden.

The White House took clear steps to put last week鈥檚 ruling into effect, said Jane Lyons, an assistant district attorney who was representing the Trump team. 鈥淚t is way too soon ... to say that it is a problem,鈥 Lyons said.

The judge said he had concerns about the government's actions

McFadden said that the first few days since his order took effect gave him concerns that Trump鈥檚 team is 鈥渘ot proceeding in compliance here, or perhaps malicious compliance.鈥 But the judge, appointed to the court by Trump during the president鈥檚 first term, said he has to assume that the administration is operating in good faith unless time proves otherwise.

He also wasn鈥檛 swayed by the AP鈥檚 argument that it鈥檚 unconstitutional for the president to have sole discretion over who covers him at these smaller events. The AP, mindful that a dispute over journalists鈥 access isn鈥檛 likely to move many in the public, has cast it as a broader issue of freedom of speech.

The AP鈥檚 decisions on what terminology to use are followed by journalists and other writers around the world through its influential stylebook. The outlet said it would continue to use Gulf of Mexico, as the body of water has been known for hundreds of years, while also noting Trump鈥檚 decision to rename it the Gulf of America.

It鈥檚 an issue likely to take months to wend its way through the courts The AP of the U.S. Court of Appeals Thursday on the same issue about compliance. The Trump administration has said that it will appeal McFadden鈥檚 initial ruling.

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David Bauder writes about media for the AP. Follow him at and

David Bauder, The Associated Press

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