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The Executive Editor of the news outlet Associated Press has released a statement addressing the ban of one of the news site’s reporters from an event at the Oval Office.
According to a recent report, the White House recently denied access to an Associated Press (AP) reporter for an event in the Oval Office on Tuesday afternoon after the news organization did not change its terminology regarding the Gulf of Mexico.
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President Donald Trump addressing a question from a reporter after Tulsi Gabbard was sworn in as Director of National Intelligence in Washington, DC on February 12, 2025. | Source: Getty Images
President Donald Trump had reportedly ordered that the body of water be renamed the “Gulf of America,” and the AP was asked to reflect this change in its reporting.
The unnamed AP reporter was prevented from entering the White House event as they normally would. Later that same day, a second AP journalist was also barred from attending another event held in the Diplomatic Reception Room. The AP has not disclosed the identity of the reporters involved.
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Donald Trump during an executive order signing in the Oval Office in Washington, DC on February 11, 2025. | Source: Getty Images
In response to the ban, the AP has publicly condemned the White House’s decision to bar its reporters from the Oval Office event after they did not adhere to an editorial demand from the Trump administration.
In a statement released Tuesday, AP Executive Editor Julie Pace emphasized the organization’s commitment to delivering factual and nonpartisan journalism to a global audience.
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AP Executive Editor Julie Pace speaking during the Web Summit in Lisbon, Portugal on November 2, 2022. | Source: Getty Images
Pace revealed that the White House had informed AP that failure to comply with Trump’s executive order renaming the Gulf of Mexico as the “Gulf of America” would result in restricted access to official events.
She described the move as alarming, arguing that the administration’s actions amount to punishment for independent journalism.
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Julie Pace on stage at the summit. | Source: Getty Images
Pace further asserted that restricting AP’s access based on editorial decisions not only undermines press freedom but also violates the First Amendment, which protects free speech and a free press.
Trump’s order to change the region’s name comes just over a month after he first made the public aware of his intention to do so. Video footage captured on January 7, 2025, by media outlet ABC, shows the moment the president addressed the press about the matter.
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Donald Trump addressing the name change of the Gulf of Mexico to the “Gulf of America” during a press briefing, posted on January 7, 2025. | Source: YouTube/ABCNews
“We’re going to be announcing at a future date, pretty soon we’re going to change—because we do most of the work there and it’s ours—we’re going to be changing—sort of the opposite of Biden, where he’s closing everything up, essentially getting rid of 50 to 60 trillion dollars worth of assets—we’re gonna be changing the name of the Gulf of Mexico to the ‘Gulf of America,'” announced Trump.

Donald Trump speaking on the then-upcoming name change. | Source: YouTube/ABCNews
https://youtube.com/shorts/vGRX41PiqaQ?si=F66xKfN33-prCb5n
He also noted his belief in the new name having a “beautiful ring,” adding, “that covers a lot of territory. The ‘Gulf of America,’ what a beautiful name, and it’s appropriate, it’s appropriate.”