US judge temporarily restores CNN's Jim Acosta's White House press pass

Cable News Network (CNN) Chief White House correspondent Jim Acosta talks to reporters after a judge temporarily restored Acosta's White House press credentials following a hearing at US District Court in Washington, US, November 16, 2018. /REUTERS
Cable News Network (CNN) Chief White House correspondent Jim Acosta talks to reporters after a judge temporarily restored Acosta's White House press credentials following a hearing at US District Court in Washington, US, November 16, 2018. /REUTERS

A US judge on Friday temporarily restored White House press credentials to CNN correspondent

JimAcosta, which were revoked after a contentious press conference with President Donald Trump, saying there should be a due process in place for limiting a journalist's access to the White House.

US District Judge Timothy Kelly, who is hearing CNN's lawsuit challenging the revocation, ordered the White House to restore

Acosta's press pass while the case is pending.

"Let's go back to work,"

Acosta

said to reporters after the hearing.

CNN said in a statement it "looked forward to a full resolution in the coming days" and thanked "all who have supported not just CNN, but a free, strong and independent American press."

The White House did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Kelly, a Trump appointee, did not address the First Amendment's protections for freedom of speech and the press, but instead focused on a due process provision of the US Constitution that provides for fair treatment through a judicial or administrative process.

"Whatever process occurred within the government is still so shrouded in mystery that the government at oral argument could not tell me who made the initial decision to revoke Acosta's press pass," Kelly said in his verbal ruling.

The White House revoked

Acosta's credentials last week in an escalation of the Republican president's attacks on the news media, which he has dubbed the "enemy of the people."

In court, US government lawyers said there is no First Amendment right of access to the White House and that

Acosta

was penalized for acting rudely at the conference and not for his criticisms of the president.

The judge said White House press secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders' initial statement that

Acosta

was penalised for touching a White House staffer attempting to remove his microphone was "likely untrue and at least partly based on evidence that was of questionable accuracy."

Sanders accused

Acosta

of "placing his hands on a young woman just trying to do her job as a White House intern" and of preventing other reporters from asking questions at the news conference.

She called his behavior "absolutely unacceptable" and said his White House press pass would be suspended "until further notice."

Read:

WATCH: The latest videos from the Star