IAPE Joins SPJ Statement Calling on Trump Administration to Lift AP Ban

As an organization representing employees committed to journalistic values of fairness and objectivity, IAPE does not take positions on political issues. There is an exception, the same one that applies to Dow Jones’s general prohibition on news staff expressing opinions on political issues: Freedom of the Press, which, as if it needed to be said, both IAPE and the Dow Jones employees we represent unreservedly favor.

When an autocratic foreign government arrested WSJ correspondent Evan Gershkovich on bogus charges, we organized protests and took steps to push for his release and emphasize the broader principle that “journalism is not a crime.” Threats to that freedom have always existed within the U.S.; not for nothing does the First Amendment explicitly protect the press from government interference.

The Trump administration, you may have heard, has evicted the Associated Press from the White House and from Air Force One in retaliation for the news cooperative’s decision to retain the geographic descriptor “Gulf of Mexico” for a body of water the president directed the U.S. Board on Geographic Names to redesignate as “Gulf of America.” According to a 1954 Interior Department bulletin, the term “Gulf of Mexico” first appeared on a world map in 1550, and since the 17th century has been the internationally accepted name for the body of water.

IAPE takes no position on controversies of geographic nomenclature. But we do view it as a grave affront to the foundational principles of democracy for the federal government to coerce a news organization to alter its stylebook to promote the president’s agenda. Inane as the administration’s grievance may be, its retaliation, inflicting a serious disservice on the public the AP serves, is intolerable. Officials must be dissuaded from efforts to impress news organizations into promoting the president’s agenda, for intimidation of the press can only grow when the government has even greater objectives at stake—ones it may believe are better advanced by suppressing independent reporting of its actions.

On Thursday, the IAPE Board of Directors voted unanimously to join a statement of protest circulated by the national Society of Professional Journalists and signed by other media employee associations, including other NewsGuild locals. The statement is below.

— 

Joint statement of journalist-support organizations on government attacks on press freedom  

Fair, accurate and independent reporting is essential to a functioning democracy. Without it, corruption and misinformation flourish. As organizations that champion journalists and the public’s right to know, we strongly condemn the campaign underway in Washington to penalize independent reporting on the government and its activities.

In a protracted war over words, the Trump administration has banned the Associated Press from White House events because the news service continues to call the “Gulf of Mexico” by its long-standing name while acknowledging the president’s executive order renaming it the “Gulf of America.”

This disturbing challenge to journalistic independence is part of a troubling pattern that extends well beyond the White House press corps. For example, the Trump-appointed chair of the Federal Communications Commission has taken extraordinary steps to investigate and intimidate broadcasters over their internal policies and constitutionally protected editorial decisions. These actions by the head of this historically bipartisan, independent regulatory body set a dangerous precedent and risk giving the government greater control over which voices are heard.

The administration also has evicted longtime news organizations from the Pentagon pressroom, giving their desks to news outlets that favorably covered the administration’s agenda.

President Trump and his congressional allies have long opposed what they viewed as government efforts to coerce speech. In 2023, for example. U.S. Rep. Jim Jordan and 44 other members of Congress said as much in a brief submitted in a U.S. Supreme Court case in which conservatives accused the Biden administration of coercing social media platforms to adopt pro-COVID vaccine policies. That brief in Murthy v. Missouri stated, “Official pressure to suppress speech violates the First Amendment.”

When leaders try to silence reporters through intimidation, legal threats and denial of access, they are not protecting the country; they are protecting themselves from scrutiny. This is how authoritarian regimes operate — by crushing dissent, punishing those who expose inconvenient facts and replacing truth with propaganda.

The First Amendment is an integral part of the U.S. Constitution that President Trump swore to “preserve, protect and defend.” He also signed an executive order on day one to "ensure that no Federal Government officer, employee, or agent engages in or facilitates any conduct that would unconstitutionally abridge the free speech of any American citizen." The president must abide by his oath of office and executive order and ensure that First Amendment principles are forcefully upheld.

In a nation founded on freedom of speech, regardless of party or ideology, the government can never compel agreement with its viewpoint as a condition of access to information. The administration must lift the ban on AP. And the administration must cease punishing news organizations based on their reporting.

Society of Professional Journalists

AAN Publishers (formerly Association of Alternative Newsmedia)

American Society of Magazine Editors

Asian American Journalists Association

Associated Collegiate Press

Association for Education in Journalism and Mass Communication

Buffalo Newspaper Guild - CWA Local 31026

Criminal Justice Journalists

Defending Rights & Dissent 

Denver Newspaper Guild - CWA Local 37074

Education Writers Association

Freedom of the Press Foundation

Inter American Press Association (IAPA) 

IAPE, Local 1096, TNG-CWA

Indigenous Journalists Association

iSolon.org

Journalism & Women Symposium (JAWS)

Military Reporters & Editors

National Association of Black Journalists

National Association of Hispanic Journalists

National Association of Science Writers

National Federation of Press Women

National Press Photographers Association

National Scholastic Press Association

National Writers Union 

NLGJA: The Association of LGBTQ+ Journalists

New Hampshire NewsGuild

Online News Association

Project Censored

Public Media Journalists Association

Quill and Scroll 

Radio Television Digital News Association 

Reporters Without Borders (RSF)

Society for Advancing Business Editing and Writing (SABEW)

Society of Environmental Journalists

The Association of Health Care Journalists

The Media Guild of the West - CWA Local 39213

The NewsGuild-CWA

The News Media Guild, Local 31222, TNG-CWA (union representing AP journalists)

The NewsGuild of New York 

The NewsGuild of Philadelphia TNG-CWA Local 38010

Toledo NewsGuild, CWA Local 34043

Washington-Baltimore News Guild