Donald Trump's White House counselor tried to hit back at criticism of new press secretary Karoline Leavitt but got owned.
Former White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre gave Americans a look behind the podium in a telling Vanity Fair piece published on Tuesday.
Karine Jean-Pierre shared about her personal life following the end of her tenure. The ex-White House press secretary wants to spend time with her family.
White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre replaced her predecessor Jen Psaki in May 2022 and held her final official press briefing on Wednesday.
Jean-Pierre arrived at the White House after a breakfast honoring Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., ready to work with Biden on the farewell speech he planned to deliver to the public later that afternoon.
Former White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre gave Americans a look behind the lectern in a telling Vanity Fair piece published on Tuesday. Jean-Pierre, who chose to keep her personal life ...
Karine Jean-Pierre spoke to The Advocate about being press secretary under President Joe Biden, living and working proud and out, and what she plans to do now.
I have kept details about my private life under lock and key,” she writes for Vanity Fair. “Society doesn’t allow women of color to be vulnerable at work.”
In a tearful farewell to the White House press corps yesterday, Karine Jean-Pierre, the first out and Black press secretary to serve a U.S. president, said her time in the role had “been an honor of a lifetime.”
White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre gave her final press briefing this week, a few days before President Biden leaves the building for the last time.
Leavitt can claim a first of her own — at age 27, she is the youngest White House press secretary in history — though she hopes to become better known for her ability to speak for and defend the Trump administration.
Karoline Leavitt is the new White House press secretary under President Donald Trump. Here's what to know about her and why she is making history.