Brazil

President Donald Trump declared Tuesday, February 18, 2025, that Associated Press (AP) loses Oval Office and Air Force One access.He demands AP use Gulf of America over Gulf of Mexico, per his January 20 executive order renaming the 1,700-mile United States -bordered waterway.
AP, a news titan often linked to progressive elites, resists the pressure, citing its stylebook and 400-year history.This has sparked a White House showdown with massive stakes.
Trumps order pushes the Interior Department to update federal maps, a shift NOAA and Google adopt for United States users.The Gulf fuels billions in oil, gas, and fishing, but Mexico, controlling 49% of its waters, rejects the rename.
Critics slam APs refusal as proof it favors leftist narratives, a charge fueled by its pandemic coverageaccused of peddling ideology over truth for elite backers.Last week, officials block AP from briefings and a Mar-a-Lago trip, branding its stance divisive.
Trump vows to keep them out, ending what many call APs reign of skewed reporting.Trumps AP News Agency Ban Ignites Gulf Naming Clash and Press Freedom Firestorm.
(Photo Internet reproduction)Supporters view this as a genuine expression of press freedom, differing from traditional media outlets like AP.
They see it as a challenge to mainstream media, which some perceive as biased.
APs Lauren Easton however describes it as an example of government overreach.The Gulf Name DisputeMeanwhile, the White House Correspondents Association flags a First Amendment violation.
Reuters and others stick to Gulf of Mexico, backing AP.
A February 12 Marquette poll shows 71% of Americans oppose the rename.Mexicos President Sheinbaum threatens Google with lawsuits, defending the historic name.
United States businessesports, energy, tourismeye trade risks as the dispute unfolds, with the Gulfs 46% United States -controlled area in play.Trump asserts legal authority, though experts limit it to federal scope, not press or global norms.
AP pledges factual reporting, but critics see this as a mask for bias, stripping its prestige among those outside the media bubble.The fight transcends a nameits about who shapes the narrative in a divided world, pitting Trumps base against an outlet they distrust.
Observers watch this clash test power, freedom, and truth on a global stage.





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