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.
Former White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre gave Americans a look behind the podium in a telling Vanity Fair piece published on Tuesday.
She kinda marketed it as a celebration of her and her tenure and unfortunately that took precedence over huge breaking news,” one source told The Post.
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.
Jean-Pierre left the James Brady Press Briefing Room with her name forever etched in White House history as the first
A compelling chapter in American political history concluded as Karine Jean-Pierre completed her final press briefing at the White House on Jan. 15. According
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.
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.”
At just 27 years old, Karoline Leavitt has set a record in the White House. Here's what she had to say in her first press briefing for the Trump administration.
Karine Jean-Pierre shared in a heartbreaking essay this week that she had a “second full-time job” while serving as White House press secretary: caring for her mother, who has cancer. She wrote in Vanity Fair that she visited her mom in New York every weekend for 18 months while maintaining a secret she kept from even her workmates.
Former Biden White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre gives Americans a glimpse of her life behind the briefing room lectern, including her mom's struggle with cancer.