Trump celebrates court ruling limiting AP's White House access amid naming flap
Hold onto your hats, folks -- President Donald Trump just scored a legal touchdown against the Associated Press in a battle over press access and a certain body of water’s name.
In a nutshell, a federal appeals court has backed the Trump administration’s right to restrict the AP from key White House areas due to the outlet’s refusal to adopt the term “Gulf of America” as ordered by the president, as the New York Post reports.
The drama kicked off in February when the White House showed the AP the door to the Oval Office after the news outlet balked at updating its sacred Stylebook to reflect Trump’s executive order renaming the Gulf of Mexico.
Court backs Trump
The AP, clinging to history, argued that the name “Gulf of Mexico” has stood for over four centuries and pointed out that international bodies haven’t jumped on the rename bandwagon either.
Initially, a lower court judge put the brakes on the administration’s ban, ruling in favor of the AP’s access to privileged press zones.
But on Friday, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia flipped that decision with a tight 2-1 ruling, affirming that White House officials can indeed pick and choose who gets into spaces like the Oval Office, Mar-a-Lago, and even Air Force One.
Trump cheers victory
President Trump didn’t hold back his glee, posting on Truth Social, “Big WIN over AP today.”
Well, it seems sticking to an asserted principle -- or in this case, a 400-year-old name -- comes with a cost, and the AP just got the bill for defying an executive mandate.
The president doubled down with, “They refused to state the facts or the Truth on the GULF OF AMERICA.” Turns out, in Trump’s world, naming rights aren’t just a suggestion -- they’re a press pass requirement.
White House redefines rules
White House press secretary Karoline Levitt echoed the triumph on X, declaring, “VICTORY!” She added that the AP isn’t entitled to special treatment in sensitive locations like aboard Air Force One.
Levitt’s comments about expanding access to “new media” instead of “failing legacy media” are a polite jab at outlets like the AP, which might need to rethink their playbook if they want back in the game.
Meanwhile, the AP isn’t waving the white flag yet, with a spokesperson stating, “We are disappointed in the court’s decision.” They’re mulling over their next move, but for now, they’re locked out of the inner circle.
Press pool dynamics see shift
For context, hundreds of reporters carry a “hard pass” for basic White House access, but only a select pool of journalists gets the golden ticket to intimate events where direct questions to the president are fair game.
Historically, the White House Correspondents Association decided that pool, but the Trump administration took the reins, hand-picking who’s in and who’s out -- a move that’s flexed some muscle with the AP’s exclusion.
Under the current setup, only one wire service gets pool access daily, a stark change from when the AP, alongside Reuters and Bloomberg, had regular entry to the president’s limited events. It’s a new era of access, and the administration’s calling the shots -- literally and figuratively -- on who tells the story from the front row.





