The Defense Department will issue new press credentials but is still looking to keep some reporters out of the building by closing its media offices after a federal judge ruled last week that the Pentagon’s restrictive press policy was unconstitutional.
U.S. District Judge Paul Friedman in Washington, D.C., sided with The New York Times, which had sued the Trump administration for banning journalists who refused to sign a contract that put limitations on how they could solicit or report on information on the military.
The nonprofits’ case was consolidated with a similar suit brought by a group of 14 states last year.
The groups brought four claims, including that DOGE staffers lacked legal authority to carry out the firings and grant eliminations and violated the separation of powers in doing so. They also alleged Musk violated the Constitution by exercising “the power of a principal officer without having received Senate confirmation.”



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