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 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 revealed Tuesday that she kept her mother’s cancer battle a secret to almost everyone – except former President Joe Biden — because as a black woman,
White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre replaced her predecessor Jen Psaki in May 2022 and held her final official press briefing on Wednesday.
White House Press Secretary Karine Jean-Pierre gave her final press briefing to reporters, and the last of the Joe Biden administration.
The BLACK ENTERPRISE Women of Power Sumit is set to receive 2 exceptional women Karine Jean-Pierre and Jemel Hill.
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.
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.
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 […]
White House Press Secretary Karine Jean-Pierre shared a laugh with Fox News White House correspondent Peter Doocy about the banter between them as her time at the podium winds to a close. “Thank
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
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.”