Watch — Sarah Sanders’ Top 8 Moments as White House Press Secretary
White House Press Secretary Sarah Sanders will exit the White House Friday for the final time as a part of the Trump administration, as reported earlier this month.
White House Press Secretary Sarah Sanders will exit the White House Friday for the final time as a part of the Trump administration, as reported earlier this month.
White House Deputy Chief of Staff for Communications and former Fox News executive Bill Shine resigned on Friday.
“We need you to be part of the fight!” he said at the event, standing up with Turning Point USA founder Charlie Kirk and Director of Communications Candace Owens.
The New York Times and Associated Press are aggressively targeting the wife of Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh.
Wednesday on CNN’s “The Situation Room,” host Wolf Blitzer demanded an apology from the Trump administration for blocking his network’s White House correspondent Kaitlan Collins from a Rose Garden event because the administration allegedly did not like the questions she asked President
Former Fox News executive Bill Shine has joined the staff of President Donald Trump’s administration, according to a Thursday statement from the office of White House Press Secretary Sarah Sanders.
News stories report that President Trump has asked Bill Shine, the former Fox News co-president, to come aboard the White House staff. Shine’s new job, at least in part, would be to direct communications. This news might not strike some observers as a very big deal.
White House Communications Director Anthony Scaramucci repeated that he and White House Chief of Staff Reince Priebus were like brothers, but warned that it was still unclear whether or not they would get along in the White House.
Monday after it was announced Bill Shine would be departing the Fox News Channel where he had been serving as co-president for the past several months, there was some speculation about the network’s 10 p.m. ET time host Sean Hannity’s
Bill Shine, who served as co-president of Fox News after Roger Ailes’ ouster, will part ways with the cable news network.
Sean Hannity took to Twitter Thursday afternoon to warn of a “total end of the Fox News Channel as we know it” in the wake of a report that suggested Fox News co-president Bill Shine lacks support from the network’s top brass.
Fox News Channel founder Rupert Murdoch on Friday appointed two longtime Fox executives as the new co-presidents of the news network as it restructures after last month’s departure of Roger Ailes following sexual harassment allegations.