US Judge Blocks Pentagon Restrictions On Press In New York Times Lawsuit

"Lawsuit alleged changes gave DoD free rein to punish reporters and outlets over coverage it did not like"

"A federal judge has blocked key portions of the Pentagon’s press access policy, siding with the New York Times and ruling that the Trump administration’s controversial policy was unconstitutional.

The policy, which was introduced in October, prohibited journalists from soliciting information that the defense department didn’t directly provide, and revoked the credentials of any outlet that didn’t sign on. News outlets including the Washington Post, the New York Times, the Wall Street Journal, Associated Press, Reuters, Bloomberg News and the Atlantic joined TV networks in refusing to sign. Of 56 news outlets in the Pentagon Press Association, only one agreed to sign onto the new policy.

“Those who drafted the first amendment believed that the nation’s security requires a free press and an informed people and that such security is endangered by governmental suppression of political speech,” US district court judge Paul Friedman wrote in his opinion. “That principle has preserved the nation’s security for almost 250 years. It must not be abandoned now.”

A lawsuit by the New York Times in the Washington DC federal court alleged that policy allowed the administration leeway to cut off access to any outlets or reporters whose coverage it didn’t like, violating constitutional free speech protections as outlined in the first amendment."

The Guardian had the story March 20, 2026.

SEE ALSO:

"Judge Rules Pentagon Restrictions on Press Are Unconstitutional" (New York Times)

"U.S. Judge Rules Against Pentagon Restrictions On Press Coverage" (NPR)

Source: Guardian, 03/23/2026