Miami Herald (Sunday)

Five things to know about the next White House press secretary

- BY TANASIA KENNEY tkenney@mcclatchy.com

Karine Jean-Pierre is slated to step into her new role as the next White House press secretary within just a few weeks, the White House announced Thursday.

Jean-Pierre, 44, who currently serves as principal deputy press secretary and deputy assistant to the president, was promoted to the coveted position and will replace current press secretary Jen Psaki, officials said. Psaki’s last day is May 13.

“Karine not only brings the experience, talent and integrity needed for this difficult job, but she will continue to lead the way in communicat­ing about the work of the BidenHarri­s Administra­tion on behalf of the American people,” President Joe Biden said in a statement. “Jill and I have known and respected Karine a long time and she will be a strong voice speaking for me and this Administra­tion.”

Here are five things to know about the White House’s next spokespers­on:

Her promotion is a historic one: Jean-Pierre will become the first Black and openly gay woman to serve as White House press secretary, The Washington Post reported. Last May, she made history when she led her first full press briefing and fielded questions in the White House briefing room, becoming only the

Jean-Pierre

Asecond Black woman to do so.

“It’s a real honor to be standing here today,” she said, according to NBC News. “Clearly the president believes that representa­tion matters, and I appreciate him giving me this opportunit­y.”

She’s no stranger to politics or The White House: As a longtime adviser to Biden, JeanPierre has filled “senior communicat­ion and political roles” in the president’s administra­tion, worked on the Biden campaign and served under him when he was vice president in President Barack Obama’s administra­tion, according to The White House.

Additional­ly, she was the regional political director for the White

House Office of Political Affairs during the ObamaBiden

Aadministr­ation, officials said, and served as deputy battlegrou­nd states director during Obama’s reelection bid in 2012, among other political roles.

She also served as chief of staff for then-vice presidenti­al nominee Kamala Harris during the Biden campaign, according to The Washington Post.

She’s an immigrant: Jean-Pierre was born on the Caribbean island of Martinique after her parents fled Haiti, according to The Carnegie Corporatio­n of New York, which named her the recipient of the Great Immigrants Award in 2021. Her family immigrated to New York City when she was 5 years old.

“That immigrant upbringing, growing up in New York, it shaped everything and anything

Athat I’m about,” she told PBS NewsHour. “My parents … came here for the American dream that in many ways eluded them. They still live check to check, but in their eyes, because I made it to the White House … they have received it.”

She has worked with political advocacy groups: Jean-Pierre previously served as chief public affairs officer for MoveOn.org, which bills itself as “the largest independen­t progressiv­e advocacy group in the country,” according to the group’s Facebook page. She also provided commentary as a political analyst for NBC and MSNBC.

She’s an author, speaker and mental health advocate: JeanPierre wrote her first book in 2019, a memoir titled,

AA“Moving Forward: A Story of Hope, Hard Work and the Promise of America.” She’s also a speaker and lecturer at Columbia University, where she teaches a course in the School of Internatio­nal and Public Affairs, according to her website.

The Columbia alumna is also an advocate for mental health and has been candid about her own struggles, which she detailed in her book.

“It’s not easy to write those words,” she wrote in a piece for MSNBC in 2019. “But it’s also not easy to struggle with your mental health, especially in a world that continues to stigmatize it. We need to make it easier to talk about, because talking about your struggles is often the first step toward getting help.”

 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States