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First Amendment Victory In Portland: Judge Tosses First Subpoena Of Reporter By Trump Administration – Patch.com


Patch.com
First Amendment Victory In Portland: Judge Tosses First Subpoena Of Reporter By Trump Administration
Patch.com
In a significant victory for the First Amendment, a federal judge in Portland told prosecutors that they could not force a reporter to testify in an ongoing criminal trial. The subpoena had been the first issued to a reporter by the Trump Justice ...

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First Amendment Victory In Portland: Judge Tosses First Subpoena Of Reporter By Trump Administration - Patch.com

They make up sources – VICE News

President Trump gave a vigorous defense of the First Amendment in his speech to the Conservative Political Action Conference Friday morning and invoked his right to free speech to bash the fake news media.

Nobody loves the First Amendment more than me, Trump told the crowd at the annual convention, held outside Washington, D.C. But [the media] never will represent the people, and were going to do something about it, he added ambiguously.

Trump criticized journalists for using anonymous sources in news stories that caused turmoil in the early days of his administration. Several recent stories quoting anonymous officials forced the resignation of Trumps national security adviser, Michael Flynn, when they revealed that Flynn had discussed economic sanctions with the Russian ambassador before taking office. Trump has repeatedly accused members of the intelligence community of leaking information to the press, as he did again Friday morning on Twitter.

Even if there are real leakers, Trump maintained that journalists make up sources. They have no sources, he said. If the sources are real, theymustbe named, he demanded.

The morning CPAC crowd whooped at the presidents attacks on the Fourth Estate, and Trump continued. The president criticized polls from CBS, ABC, NBC, and the Clinton News Network (or CNN), which brought more whoops of delight. When Hillary Clinton came up a second time, some of the crowd indulged in a Lock her up chant.

Red Make America Great Again hats dotted the sea of blue and black sport coats filling the ballroom wall-to-wall. In years past, Trump enjoyed a smallbutfervent fan base at CPAC but the young, grassroots conservative crowd tended to cheer loudest for Kentucky Sen. Rand Paul, a libertarian favorite, or for Sen. Ted Cruz, a champion of conservatives. Skepticism of Trump ran so hot last year during the presidential campaign that he skipped the 2016CPAC, prompting Cruz and other GOP primary opponents to lambast him for the snub.

But Trump returned to CPAC Friday a happy, boastful warrior. He pledged that he would oversee one of the greatest military buildups in American history. He declared that the Republican Party will now be the party of the American worker, in seeming contrast to past Republican orthodoxy that highlighted business executives and entrepreneurs.

America is coming back and its roaring and you can hear it, Trump said. Its going to be bigger and better and stronger than ever before.

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They make up sources - VICE News

Margaret Sullivan receives First Amendment Award – The Boston Globe

From left: Tom Fiedler, Donna Green, Margaret Sullivan, Judith Meyer, and Michael Donoghue at the New England First Amendment Coalitions annual awards luncheon on Friday.

The New England First Amendment Coalition presented its top honor to Margaret Sullivan, the media columnist for The Washington Post.

Sullivan accepted the Stephen Hamblett First Amendment Award on Friday before a large crowd of journalists, lawyers, educators, students, and media executives at NEFACs annual awards luncheon at the Marriott Long Wharf.

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The award is named after the late publisher of the Providence Journal who passed away in 2005, and past recipients have included US Senator Patrick Leahy; former federal judge Nancy Gertner; former Globe editor Marty Baron; James Risen and Anthony Lewis of The New York Times; and GlobalPost founder Philip Balboni.

The New England First Amendment Coalition also presented Judith Meyer, executive editor of the Sun Journal of Lewiston, Maine, with the Michael Donoghue Freedom of Information Award, and Donna Green of New Hampshire received the Antonia Orfield Citizenship Award.

Among those in attendance at the luncheon were Justin Silverman, executive director of the New England First Amendment Coalition; Dan Kennedy of Northeastern University; Michael Rezendes, Larry Edelman, Emily Procknal, Jasmine Wu, Nick Osborne, and Linda Pizzuti Henry of the Globe; Mike Beaudet of WCVB-TV; Tom Fiedler, dean of the College of Communication at Boston University; and WBZ political analyst Jon Keller, who served as emcee.

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Margaret Sullivan receives First Amendment Award - The Boston Globe

The White House’s radical attack on the First Amendment cannot go unanswered – The Guardian

These are strong-arm tactics of an authoritarian. Photograph: Pool/Getty Images

Those who said the presidency would change Donald Trump were correct. It has made him worse. In barring news outlets like the New York Times, CNN and the Guardian from a White House press briefing on Friday, the president has declared war on the First Amendment. In so doing he has attacked a cornerstone of democratic self-governance.

New York Times editor Dean Baquet said: Nothing like this has ever happened at the White House in our long history of covering multiple administrations of different parties. CNN, which the president has often labeled fake news, responded by saying: Apparently this is how they retaliate when you report facts they dont like. Buzzfeeds editor echoed that point, saying this was an apparent attempt to punish news outlets.

On the same day that access was being denied to journalists at the White House, Trump was at CPAC continuing his ferocious attacks on the media: I want you all to know that we are fighting the fake news, said Trump. They have a professional obligation as members of the press to report honestly. But as you saw throughout the entire campaign, and even now, the fake news doesnt tell the truth.

At the conference, Trump dismissed concerns about press freedoms. They always bring up the First Amendment he said.

The escalation has been swift but not unplanned. The opening salvo was chief strategist Steve Bannons labeling the press the opposition and telling it to keep its mouth shut. Then came Trumps tweet defaming the press as the enemy of the people. And now comes this denying some of the worlds most revered news organizations access to the White House.

These must be seen for what they are: the strong-arm tactics of an authoritarian. It is, in fact, a signature of authoritarian rulers that they turn the opposition into the enemy. The opposition is to be engaged and persuaded; the enemy is to be isolated and crushed.

The turning of the opposition into the enemy is often a prelude toward the final step of authoritarian consolidation: turning enemies into criminals. Do any of us dare to believe that Bannon, the system-destroyer, would shy away from this? And need we ask who is the real enemy of our constitutional democracy?

This radical attack cannot go unanswered. And the pushback must come from all corners in particular from congressional Republicans. We cannot rely on John McCain, Lindsay Graham, and Cory Gardner to be the lone voices of concern. Congressional Republicans stand at a difficult crossroads.

Opposing the president not only puts their agenda at risk but their political careers in jeopardy. Paul Ryan learned the hard way of the perils of crossing Trump, when he saw his approval ratings plummet after refusing to campaign on Trumps behalf in the latter stages of the national election.

The hazards of opposition are real on all sides. But members of Congress swear to uphold the Constitution, and this oath of public service requires defending our democracy from this extraordinary threat.

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The White House's radical attack on the First Amendment cannot go unanswered - The Guardian

Hillary Clinton to Democrats: ‘Keep fighting and keep the faith’ – Washington Post

The Democratic Party posted a video message from former presidential candidate Hillary Clinton, who encouraged members to keep fighting for the party's ideals. (Reuters)

ATLANTA In her first purely political remarks since her 2016 election defeat, former secretary of state Hillary Clinton told Democrats she would be with them every step of the way, aligning herself with the protests that have bedeviled Republicans all year.

Let resistance plus persistence equal progress for our party and our country, said Clinton, referring to the catch-all term for the protests and for Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnells criticism of Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) she persisted which had immediately been adapted into a rallying cry.

Clinton also told Democrats to be proud of the progressive platform they had drafted after the 2016 primary, suggesting that it had put the party in sync with protesters.

Ideas we championed are now inspiring leaders and activists around our country, Clinton said.

The platform process was somewhat fraught, with the Clinton campaign in what would become a familiar pattern making concessions to allow supporters of Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) a minority role. During a four-part process, Sanders supporters, including now-DNC chairman candidate Rep. Keith Ellison (D-Minn.) fought in vain to put the party on record against the Trans-Pacific Partnership, fracking and the drug war, instead agreeing to compromise language that Sanders praised but many activists considered watered-down.

We now need to stay engaged, in the field and online, Clinton said.

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Hillary Clinton to Democrats: 'Keep fighting and keep the faith' - Washington Post