Judge
Dismisses Trump’s Lawsuit Against The New York Times
The judge
said that the complaint failed to contain a “short and plain statement of the
claim.” Mr. Trump has 28 days to refile.
Michael
M. Grynbaum
By
Michael M. Grynbaum
Sept. 19,
2025
https://www.nytimes.com/2025/09/19/business/media/trump-new-york-times-lawsuit.html
A federal
judge in Florida on Friday threw out President Trump’s defamation suit against
The New York Times four days after it was filed, calling the complaint
“improper and impermissible” in its present form.
The judge
provided Mr. Trump’s lawyers with 28 days to file an amended complaint.
The
lawsuit, which asked for $15 billion in damages, accused The Times and four of
its reporters, as well as the book publisher Penguin Random House, of
disparaging Mr. Trump’s reputation as a successful businessman.
But Judge
Steven D. Merryday, of the U.S. District Court for the Middle District of
Florida, said the president’s 85-page complaint was unnecessarily lengthy and
digressive. He criticized Mr. Trump’s lawyers for waiting until the 80th page
to lodge a formal allegation of defamation, and for including, ahead of it,
dozens of “florid and enervating” pages lavishing praise on the president and
enumerating a range of grievances.
“A
complaint is not a public forum for vituperation and invective,” Judge Merryday
wrote. “Not a protected platform to rage against an adversary.”
“We
welcome the judge’s quick ruling, which recognized that the complaint was a
political document rather than a serious legal filing,” a New York Times
spokesman said on Friday. A Penguin Random House spokeswoman said: “We applaud
the judge’s decision.”
A
spokesman for Mr. Trump’s legal team said in a statement: “President Trump will
continue to hold the Fake News accountable through this powerhouse lawsuit
against The New York Times, its reporters and Penguin Random House, in
accordance with the judge’s direction on logistics.”
The
lawsuit was the latest broadside by a president who is spearheading the most
severe government crackdown on media institutions in modern times. Mr. Trump
sued The Wall Street Journal in July for an article concerning his relationship
with the disgraced financier Jeffrey Epstein, and he has sued CBS News and ABC
News over their news coverage, extracting a $16 million settlement from each
network.
Mr.
Trump’s complaint against The Times this week claimed that a series of articles
before the 2024 election were aimed at hurting his candidacy and caused
“enormous” damage to his “professional and occupational interests.” The
defendants included The Times and four of its reporters — Peter Baker, Russ
Buettner, Susanne Craig and Michael S. Schmidt — as well as Penguin Random
House, which published a book about Mr. Trump by Ms. Craig and Mr. Buettner.
The
president’s complaint objected to certain details and anecdotes in The Times’s
coverage. But it also digressed into lengthy tributes to Mr. Trump, citing his
“singular brilliance” and describing his 2024 election win as “the greatest
personal and political achievement in American history.”
Judge
Merryday, an appointee of President George H.W. Bush, referred to some of those
asides as “tedious and burdensome” for a legal document, writing that “a
complaint is not a megaphone for public relations.” He wrote that the
complaint, as written, “stands unmistakably and inexcusably athwart” legal
requirements that complaints must be “a short and plain statement of the
claim.”
Judge
Merryday wrote that his order on Friday “suggests nothing about the truth of
the allegations or the validity of the claims but addresses only the manner of
the presentation of the allegations in the complaint.”
Mr. Trump
sued The Times in 2021 over an investigation into his financial history; the
suit was dismissed and Mr. Trump was ordered to pay The Times’s legal expenses.
In 2020, his re-election campaign sued the newspaper for libel over an Opinion
essay; that lawsuit was also dismissed.
Michael
M. Grynbaum writes about the intersection of media, politics and culture. He
has been a media correspondent at The Times since 2016.


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