Question: What does CNN’s Jim Acosta crave more than anything?

If you said “attention,” go to the head of the class. It’s a mystery why the White House has given Acosta way more than that. Acosta had his “hard pass” yanked after last week’s press conference. Acosta has literally become a federal case. CNN filed suit claiming that their reporter’s First and Fifth amendment rights were violated. More than a dozen news organizations, including Fox, have filed amicus briefs supporting CNN. Even the Trump-friendly Fox News judicial analyst Andrew Napolitano has opined that Acosta has a strong case. Mr. Showboat is just where he wants to be — the center of attention — but thanks to President Donald Trump’s gratuitous swipe, he is also a free-press martyr.

Acosta’s technique has been honed for many months — asking questions not to receive answers but to shame. At the Nov. 7 press conference, Acosta rose to “challenge” the president on what he had said about the caravan during the closing days of the campaign: “As you know, Mr. President, the caravan was not an ‘invasion.’ It’s a group of migrants moving up from Central America towards the border with the U.S.”

It’s not Acosta’s job to joust with the president over interpretations of words. Leave that to commentators or politicians. He could have asked the president where he got his information about Middle Eastern terrorists supposedly infiltrating into the caravan, or what supporting evidence he had to support his claim that there were many criminals in its ranks. Instead, he demanded, “Do you think you demonized immigrants?”

Frankly, if Acosta thinks the president demonized immigrants, let him write an op-ed. A press conference is supposed to be about eliciting information. Acosta doesn’t practice journalism so much as performance art.

The White House handled this mosquito in about the worst possible way. The president could have declined to call on him. Having called on him and been offended by his tone, the president could have refused to take the bait, saying, “You might want to run for office yourself. In the meantime, I’ll call on someone who wants to ask a question, not stage a debate.”

Instead, in a fit of petulance, the White House revoked Acosta’s press pass.

Sarah Huckabee Sanders, who cannot be much more honest than her boss and hope to keep her job, issued a tweet explaining that Acosta was exiled because he had apparently physically blocked the intern who attempted to remove the mic from his hands. “President Trump believes in a free press and expects and welcomes tough questions of him and his Administration,” Sanders tweeted. “We will, however, never tolerate a reporter placing his hands on a young woman just trying to do her job as a White House intern….”

Anyone who had watched the exchange — or looked it up on YouTube — knew that this was risible. Yet, Sanders said it anyway and even released a video that had been slightly doctored (by speeding it up) to make it seem that Acosta had been physically swatting at the intern.

Within a few days, Sanders changed her tune, claiming instead that the White House cannot run a smooth press conference if reporters hog the mic. But let’s pause to consider where this White House has settled. Covering up for an intemperate retaliation against a journalist, the spokesman for the president of the United States attempted to rewrite the history that we had all seen with our own eyes just days before.

Sanders would be a great fit in the Ministry of Truth.