The room fell silent when Karoline Leavitt revealed a striking comparison. She said that after just one year back in office, President Trump had already surpassed Joe Biden’s entire four-year record for media access. According to Leavitt, Biden spent much of his presidency “hiding,” while much of the press accepted his limited availability instead of demanding more direct engagement.
Leavitt argued that Biden’s unusually low number of press conferences and interviews should have raised serious concerns. Instead, she claimed the media treated a president who rarely answered unscripted questions as simply cautious rather than inaccessible, allowing that approach to become accepted without significant criticism.
She presented Trump’s media strategy as a clear departure from that model. Rather than relying on a small group of traditional news organizations, Leavitt said the administration is expanding access by including more digital outlets, regional media, and a wider range of political perspectives in White House briefings.
Critics have warned that changing the briefing room structure could give the administration greater influence over coverage. Leavitt rejected that argument, insisting that greater transparency comes from broader participation, not from limiting access to a handful of legacy media organizations.
For Leavitt, the contrast is simple: while critics question Trump’s media changes, she believes the real concern was a presidency that “hiding” from regular scrutiny. She argued that giving more voices access to the White House represents a more open system than one where a president rarely appeared before reporters.