
Defense secretary Pete Hegseth arrives to speak at the Pentagon. (Photo by Mandel Ngan / AFP via Getty Images)
On Friday afternoon, a federal judge delivered a stinging rebuke to Pete Hegseth’s escalating war on the press—striking down the Pentagon’s sweeping effort to control who gets to report the news.
In a 40-page opinion, U.S. District Judge Paul Friedman ruled that the draconian press credentialing policy engineered by Hegseth and his leadership team, turning the Pentagon into a cozy safe space hidden from scrutiny, was flatly unconstitutional. The judge highlighted Donald Trump’s foreign wars and the importance of reporting for the public’s understanding of the entanglements.
“Especially in light of the country's recent incursion into Venezuela and its ongoing war with Iran, it is more important than ever that the public have access to information from a variety of perspectives about what its government is doing—so that the public can support government policies, if it wants to support them; protest, if it wants to protest; and decide based on full, complete, and open information who they are going to vote for in the next election,” Friedman wrote.
Friday's ruling was a long time coming and Status has been documenting the road to it. Since last spring, we've tracked Hegseth's systematic campaign against press independence step by step: the revocation of hallway access, the unprecedented credentialing restrictions, the banishment of journalists who refused to comply, and their replacement with MAGA influencers cosplaying as reporters.
Friedman’s decision nuked the access restrictions implemented by Hegseth, the 45-year-old former Fox News weekend host turned Pentagon chief, requiring media organizations to sign a pledge not to gather information unless the Department of Defense formally authorized its release, effectively turning journalists into Pyongyang-style mouthpieces for the administration. The policy even attempted to police reporters’ behavior outside the building, banning them from seeking tips on social media without approval.
When news outlets refused to sign, journalists were replaced with MAGA cheerleaders, including extremist and “proud Islamophobe” Laura Loomer, former Florida Republican Rep. Matt Gaetz, and far-right conspiracy theorist Jack Posobiec. Friedman noted the obvious in his opinion: the policy's "true purpose and practical effect" was to "weed out disfavored journalists—those who were not, in the Department's view, 'on board and willing to serve'—and replace them with news entities" that supported the Trump administration. “That is viewpoint discrimination, full stop.”
The legal challenge, brought by The New York Times and argued by renowned media attorney Ted Boutrous, amounted to a sweeping victory for press freedom. "The district court's decision is a powerful rejection of the Pentagon's effort to impede freedom of the press and the reporting of vital information to the American people during a time of war,” Boutrous said in a statement. “The district court's opinion is not just a win for The Times, [Julian] Barnes, and other journalists, but most importantly, for the American people who benefit from their coverage of the Pentagon."
In wake of the decision, the Pentagon Press Association quickly called for the reinstatement of journalists who had been sidelined under the policy, hailing the decision as “a great day for freedom of the press.” Naturally, the Pentagon struck a different tone. Hegseth’s chief spokesman Sean Parnell wrote on X: "We disagree with the decision and are pursuing an immediate appeal."
But the ruling is the latest loss for the Trump administration’s war on the press. Again and again, when the administration’s most aggressive attempts to sideline the press are put to the test in court, they collapse under legal scrutiny. Whether it has been efforts to strip reporters of access, punish unfavorable coverage, or reengineer the media landscape with loyalist voices, judges have repeatedly found that these moves run afoul of the First Amendment. And while some media outlets have backed down in the face of Trump's attacks, it is the latest reminder that the courts remain one of the few arenas where the administration’s campaign against independent journalism continues to meet meaningful resistance.
"It's unfortunate that it took this long for the Pentagon's ridiculous policy to be thrown in the trash,” said Seth Stern, chief of advocacy at the Freedom of the Press Foundation. “Especially now that we are spending money and blood on yet another war based on constantly shifting pretexts, journalists should double down on their commitment to finding out what the Pentagon does not want the public to know rather than parroting 'authorized' narratives."

