NOISE Barred From Governor's News Conferences Raising First Amendment Red Flags
Governor Ricketts office has barred NOISE and interim managing editor, Emily Chen-Newton, from entry to the governors news briefings and from asking questions to the governor himself. Chen-Newton went to the capitol building in person on Wednesday, March 31, requesting to be let into the press conference or to speak to Taylor Gage, Director of the Governors Strategic Communications team. Gage claimed that because NOISE is not considered credentialed media Chen-Newton was not allowed to ask questions of the governor. She wont be admitted, Gage said, addressing the security guard.
Emily Chen-Newton first initiated contact via email with the governors office in July of 2020 with questions regarding the COVID-19 pandemic. None of her questions were answered via email or asked during the Governors briefings. She drove to the capital in March after multiple emails beginning in February of this year inquiring about the offices process or criteria for the press were ignored. Not being allowed into that days press conference, Chen-Newton was allowed to wait in the reception room while the conference was carried out behind a closed door. She waited for the entirety of the conference to speak with Gage about their credentialing process, only to be informed an hour later that Gage would not speak to her.
Moments later she approached Gage in a hallway of the states capitol building where he told her that she could send an email with her concerns, and shut the office door as Chen-Newton stood in the hallway. Later reflecting on that moment, she recalls the irony of the example that was being set in a building that has the words, The Salvation of the State is Watchfulness in the Citizen etched in stone over its main entrance (written by Hartley Burr Alexander). And there was something poignant about having a group of elementary school students within earshot of this whole scene, she says.
As reported by the Omaha World-Herald, the following Friday, Taylor Gage commented in a statement, NOISE is an advocacy organization funded by liberal donors and thus would not be credentialed as a media organization. In response, the Omaha World-Herald and Lincoln Journal Star published a joint editorial Wednesday, April 14, standing in support of NOISE, explaining that the ban is in violation of First Amendment rights and a thinly veiled political move.
Read more: https://www.noiseomaha.com/news-now/2021/4/14/noise-barred-from-governors-news-conferences-raising-first-amendment-red-flags