Karoline Leavitt,27,fields questions from reporters during her first press briefing as White House press secretary.Credit:Bloomberg
No longer would tradition rule the roost,such as the first question going to the Associated Press news agency. Instead,“new media” players Axios and Breitbart were given the first bite – the latter being a hard-right organ that has promoted conspiracy theories and was once chaired by former Trump strategist Steve Bannon.
But Leavitt also urged a broader range of non-traditional media players to apply for a White House press pass. “Independent journalists,podcasters,social media influencers and content creators” were all encouraged to enter the fray. They would even have assigned seats at the front of the room,previously reserved for staff.
“It’s essential to our team that we share President Trump’s message everywhere and adapt this White House to the new media landscape in 2025,” Leavitt announced,noting millions of Americans,especially the young,now sourced their news content from podcasts,blogs,social media and other “independent” outlets.
Leavitt grew up in the solidly Democratic state of New Hampshire and attended Saint Anselm College on a softball scholarship. There,she worked on the student newspaper and penned opinion pieces decrying the “liberal media” and defendingTrump’s first-term “travel ban” for seven Muslim countries.
There were many questions for White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt at her first briefing.Credit:Bloomberg
She later obtained a White House internship and successfully lobbied for a job in the press office. When Trump lost in 2020,she worked for a Republican congresswoman,and then ran for Congress herself,winning a 10-way Republican primary for a New Hampshire seat,but losing to the incumbent Democrat at the 2022 election.
While pregnant,Leavitt was the national spokeswoman for Trump’s 2024 campaign,and gave birth just three days beforethe attempt on Trump’s life at a rally in Butler,Pennsylvania. She watched the horror unfold on TV.