White House press secretary Sean Spicer blocked CNN, the New York Times, the Los Angeles Times, Politico and other news outlets from a gaggle. Several organizations boycotted the gathering, which was originally set to be a briefing, in response.

Spicer required that journalists sign up for an “expanded pool gaggle” on Friday, retaining the right to exclude reporters. He had already berated a smaller pool gathering in the morning, the New York Times’ Glenn Thrush reported.

The White House also canceled the previously scheduled daily briefing in favor of the gaggle.

Why Spicer wants hand-picked gaggle: 1) avoid on-camera goof 2) Trump can't watch a gaggle 3) get press to 'whine' 4) sow internal strife — Glenn Thrush (@GlennThrush) February 24, 2017

Scene in the White House briefing room as reporters got turned away from the gaggle in Spicer's office. pic.twitter.com/UvIW7rbGzx — Katherine Faulders (@KFaulders) February 24, 2017

While several outlets that President Donald Trump has previously deemed “failing” and “fake news” were excluded, conservative organizations like Breitbart, the Washington Times and One America News Network (OANN) were allowed in.

The Associated Press and Time boycotted the afternoon gaggle as a result, and the White House Correspondents Association is protesting, according to CNN’s Jim Sciutto.

.@AP & @TIME boycotted as a result. WH Correspondents Assn protesting. Conservative outlets Breitbart, Washington Times, @OANN allowed in — Jim Sciutto (@jimsciutto) February 24, 2017

“The WHCA board is protesting strongly against how today's gaggle is being handled by the White House,” Jeff Mason, the association’s president, said in a statement.

Along with CNN, the New York Times, the LA Times and Politico, Spicer also excluded The Hill, BuzzFeed, the Daily Mail, the BBC and the New York Daily News.

Several major news organizations were let in to cover the gaggle, including ABC, CBS, NBC, Fox, Reuters, Bloomberg and McClatchy.

The White House decision drew strong condemnation from journalists on Twitter.

To be clear: this is how anti-democratic authoritarian regimes behave.



THIS IS NOT AMERICA. https://t.co/QI5Q6QFqMU — igorvolsky (@igorvolsky) February 24, 2017

Shame on reporters who didn't walk out of the White House briefing denied to their CNN, NYT etc colleagues. — Spencer Ackerman (@attackerman) February 24, 2017

CNN called their exclusion “an unacceptable development” in a statement.

CNN was blocked from WH @PressSec's media gaggle today. This is our response: pic.twitter.com/8SfY2uYKEI — CNN Communications (@CNNPR) February 24, 2017

Despite the decision, the Trump White House “is more accessible than probably any prior administration,” Spicer told the reporters who were allowed in, according to Thrush. For the first time, there are “Skype seats” for journalists who cannot physically attend briefings.

Spicer during gaggle: "We have shown an abundance of accessibility and we have brought more reporters into the process" — Tyler Kingkade (@tylerkingkade) February 24, 2017

During Trump’s speech at the Conservative Political Action Conference (CPAC) on Friday morning, he repeated his attacks on the mainstream media, stating that only the “fake news” media is the “enemy of the people.” He specifically targeted CNN, calling them the “Clinton News Network.”

Trump supporters applauded Spicer’s move on Twitter.

.@CNN, @nytimes, @politico were all blocked from a White House press gaggle! FAKE NEWS is the enemy of the people! Can't fool the people! pic.twitter.com/irk4h3O17l — Trump Super PAC 🇺🇸 (@TrumpSuperPAC) February 24, 2017

A press “gaggle” is an off-camera meeting, in this case in Spicer’s office, rather than the daily on-camera briefing that takes place in the James S. Brady Press Briefing Room.

The daily “in-house” pool contains 21 reporters who cover White House events when there is not enough room for the full press cadre. There is also a smaller pool of reporters that travels with the president. However, several of the excluded organizations are normally in one or both of those pools.

Media outlets barred from press "gaggle" because the Trump Administration totally isn't terrified of hard questions. https://t.co/z2BRfa9W6T — GOPocalypse (@GOPocalypse) February 24, 2017

When reporters asked for an explanation as to why they were barred and who was allowed in, White House spokeswoman Stephanie Grisham accused one of “threatening” her because the journalist had said news outlets would be filing stories about the issue, according to the excluded New York Daily News.

Senior White House reporters have said they’ve never seen another presidential administration make such a move, but Trump was known for banning outlets, including the Washington Post, from his events on the campaign trail.

-@nytimes exec. editor: “Nothing like this has ever happened…in our long history of covering multiple administrations of different parties." — Steve Herman (@W7VOA) February 24, 2017

“We encourage the organizations that were allowed in to share the material with others in the press corps who were not,” Mason said. “The board will be discussing this further with White House staff.”

The reporters who were allowed in have split up the transcribing duties to share with colleagues who were left out, the Wall Street Journal’s Byron Tau tweeted.

Numerous White House reporters have split up the duties of transcribing the Spicer gaggle to share with their colleagues who were excluded. — Byron Tau (@ByronTau) February 24, 2017

Grisham told the WHCA that “claims that outlets were excluded are not factual.”

“The pool was there, so various media mediums were represented,” she said.