• The Pentagon will replace some large media outlets that have long had desks inside the Pentagon.
  • Outlets like NBC News and The New York Times will lose their space.
  • It’s part of a “rotation program” that allows different media outlets to work from the Pentagon.

The Defense Department said it is implementing a new “annual media rotation program,” which means some legacy media outlets — like The New York Times and NBC News — will lose their longtime Pentagon workspaces to a slate of new publications.

In a major shake-up for the Pentagon’s “Correspondents’ Corridor,” Pentagon spokesman Jonathan Ullyot announced in a memo to the Pentagon Press Association that The New York Times, NBC, National Public Radio, and Politico would all have to vacate their office space in the building.

The sought-after space will be offered instead to The New York Post, Breitbart News, One America News Network, and The Huffington Post.

The changes — which the memo said were intended to “broaden access to the limited space of the Correspondents’ Corridor” — are set to take effect on February 14.

“Each year, one outlet from each press medium — print, online, television, and radio — that has enjoyed working from a physical office in the Pentagon will rotate out of the building to allow a new outlet from the same medium that has not had the unique opportunity to report as a resident member of the Pentagon Press Corps,” the memo read.

Ullyot also said in the memo that access to the Pentagon would remain unchanged for the publications that have been removed from their traditional office spaces.

“They will continue to enjoy the same media access to the Pentagon and will be able to attend and cover briefings and be considered for travel with civilian and military leaders in the Department as they have previously,” the memo read.

In a statement to Business Insider, NPR urged the Department of Defense to “expand the offices available to press” at the Pentagon.

This decision interferes with the ability of millions of Americans to directly hear from Pentagon leadership, and with NPR’s public interest mission to serve Americans who turn to our network of local public media stations in all 50 states,” the statement read.

New York Times spokesperson Charlie Stadtlander told BI that the newspaper is “committed to covering the Pentagon fully and fairly.”

“This move to expel the Times and other independent, fact-based news outlets from the Pentagon’s press spaces is a concerning development,” Stadtlander said. “Steps designed to impede access are clearly not in the public interest.”

NBC News said in a statement it was “disappointed” by the decision.

“Despite the significant obstacles this presents to our ability to gather and report news in the national public interest, we will continue to report with the same integrity and rigor NBC News always has,” the outlet said.

In January, the Senate narrowly confirmed Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth in a 51-50 vote, with Vice President JD Vance casting the tie-breaker after three Republicans joined every Democrat in rejecting his nomination — a significant departure from the broad support that the GOP-controlled Senate has so far granted to most of President Donald Trump’s Cabinet nominees.

The outlets who will have to vacate their Pentagon workspaces all covered Hegseth’s tumultuous confirmation process, during which he faced questions about alcohol abuse and sexual assault accusations stemming from a 2017 incident.

Hegseth, who was sworn into his new role on January 25, has denied the allegations.

The Defense Department’s move also comes as White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt announced earlier this week that the Trump administration would be granting access to the White House press briefing room to “new media” — which includes TikTok content creators and podcasters.

Share.
Exit mobile version