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.
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.
Fox News White House correspondent Jacqui Heinrich pressed White House Press Secretary Karine Jean-Pierre Wednesday on why President Joe Biden
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.
Former White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre revealed some private information after leaving her post, but embedded in her reasons for keeping it secret were statements that […]
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.
Karine Jean-Pierre told very few people about the health battle, but has since revealed that the then-President was among the inner circle she had confided in.
Megyn Kelly is joined by Emily Jashinsky, D.C. correspondent for Unherd, and Eliana Johnson, editor of the Washington Free Beacon, to discuss Melania Trump’s iconic and classy style at the inauguration,
Both Democrat and Republican lawmakers bin vote to ban di video-sharing app last year, sake of concerns about im links to di Chinese goment.
Media critic and author Joe Concha lists his five favorite examples of outgoing White House Press Secretary Karine Jean-Pierre's word-salad answers.
The White House on Saturday called TikTok’s statement warning that it will “go dark” on Sunday unless President Biden steps in a “stunt,” arguing the app doesn’t have to take action