The White House is making changes to which outlets are included in the press pool covering President Trump, and doing away with the spot normally reserved for wire services covering his daily activities.
A source in the West Wing confirmed the changes to The Hill on Tuesday evening and said moving forward, the press pool will made up of the following group: One print journalist who will serve as the “print pooler,” each day, one additional print journalist, a crew from one of the major television networks, a crew from a secondary television network or streaming service, one radio journalist, one “new media” or independent journalist and four photojournalists.
The White House official said eligible outlets will be chosen for the pool on a rotating basis and White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt will retain day-to-day discretion to determine composition of the pool.
Wire-based outlets will be eligible for selection as part of the pool’s daily print-journalist rotation as part of the shakeup, but will no longer have a permanent slot in the group.
The official said outlets will be eligible for participation in the pool, “irrespective of the substantive viewpoint expressed by an outlet.”
The press pool had traditionally been determined by the White House Correspondents Association, a responsibility Trump’s West Wing took over earlier this spring.
The changes come just days after a federal judge ordered the Trump administration to restore The Associated Press’s access to key White House spaces after it banned AP reporters over the outlet’s refusal to use “Gulf of America” in its widely-cited stylebook.
The AP was not included in Monday or Tuesday’s press pool, the first day the judge’s order went into effect.
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