WHITE HOUSE PRESS SECRETARY
The 'White House Press Secretary' is a senior White House official with a rank one step below Presidential Cabinet level. The Press Secretary is the primary spokesperson for the Administration. The current Press Secretary is Tony Snow, who will be resigning in September, and will be replaced by current deputy press secretary Dana Perino.

Responsibilities center on collecting information about what is happening inside the Administration and around the world, and getting that information to the media in a timely and accurate fashion. The information includes things like a summary of the President's schedule for the day, whom the President has seen, called or had interactions with, and the official position of the Administration on the news of the day.
The Press Secretary traditionally also fields questions from the White House Press Corps in briefings and press conferences, which are generally televised, and "press gaggles", which are on-the-record briefings without video recording, though transcripts are usually made available.
The position of White House Press Secretary has often been filled by individuals from news media backgrounds:
★ Franklin D. Roosevelt appointed Stephen T. Early, a United Press International reporter and Associated Press correspondent;
★ Harry S. Truman appointed J. Leonard Reinsch, a radio man; Jonathan W. Daniels, a newspaper man who was in the Franklin Roosevelt Administration in multiple agencies and boards just prior to becoming White House Press Secretary; Charles Griffith Ross, a newspaper man who received the Pulitzer Prize in 1932; Early; Joseph Short, a newspaper man; and Roger Tubby, a reporter and editor turned Democratic National Committee spokesman before becoming White House Press Secretary;
★ Dwight D. Eisenhower appointed James C. Hagerty, a ''New York Times'' reporter;
★ John F. Kennedy appointed Pierre Salinger, a reporter and editor;
★ Lyndon B. Johnson appointed George Christian, a reporter for International News Service;
★ Gerald Ford appointed newspaper veteran Jerald terHorst and NBC News correspondent Ron Nessen to the post;
★ Ronald Reagan appointed Larry Speakes, a newspaper man, and Marlin Fitzwater, a newspaper man;
★ George H.W. Bush retained Fitzwater.
★ George W. Bush appointed Fox News anchor Tony Snow, who also had extensive experience in the fields of print and radio journalism.
Fiction: On the hit NBC television show ''The West Wing'', C.J. Cregg depicts the modern press secretary.
★ Bush administration Press Briefings (by date)
★ Clinton administration Press Briefings (use search box in lower left corner)
★ ''White House Press Corps.org'' home page. Daily Adventures with the White House Press Corps, in their own words..

In August 2006, President George W. Bush hosted seven White House Press Secretaries, before the James S. Brady Press Briefing Room underwent renovation: Joe Lockhart, Dee Dee Myers, Marlin Fitzwater, Tony Snow, Ron Nessen, and James Brady with his wife Sarah Brady.
| Contents |
| Responsibilities |
| External links and references |
Responsibilities
Responsibilities center on collecting information about what is happening inside the Administration and around the world, and getting that information to the media in a timely and accurate fashion. The information includes things like a summary of the President's schedule for the day, whom the President has seen, called or had interactions with, and the official position of the Administration on the news of the day.
The Press Secretary traditionally also fields questions from the White House Press Corps in briefings and press conferences, which are generally televised, and "press gaggles", which are on-the-record briefings without video recording, though transcripts are usually made available.
The position of White House Press Secretary has often been filled by individuals from news media backgrounds:
★ Franklin D. Roosevelt appointed Stephen T. Early, a United Press International reporter and Associated Press correspondent;
★ Harry S. Truman appointed J. Leonard Reinsch, a radio man; Jonathan W. Daniels, a newspaper man who was in the Franklin Roosevelt Administration in multiple agencies and boards just prior to becoming White House Press Secretary; Charles Griffith Ross, a newspaper man who received the Pulitzer Prize in 1932; Early; Joseph Short, a newspaper man; and Roger Tubby, a reporter and editor turned Democratic National Committee spokesman before becoming White House Press Secretary;
★ Dwight D. Eisenhower appointed James C. Hagerty, a ''New York Times'' reporter;
★ John F. Kennedy appointed Pierre Salinger, a reporter and editor;
★ Lyndon B. Johnson appointed George Christian, a reporter for International News Service;
★ Gerald Ford appointed newspaper veteran Jerald terHorst and NBC News correspondent Ron Nessen to the post;
★ Ronald Reagan appointed Larry Speakes, a newspaper man, and Marlin Fitzwater, a newspaper man;
★ George H.W. Bush retained Fitzwater.
★ George W. Bush appointed Fox News anchor Tony Snow, who also had extensive experience in the fields of print and radio journalism.
Fiction: On the hit NBC television show ''The West Wing'', C.J. Cregg depicts the modern press secretary.
External links and references
★ Bush administration Press Briefings (by date)
★ Clinton administration Press Briefings (use search box in lower left corner)
★ ''White House Press Corps.org'' home page. Daily Adventures with the White House Press Corps, in their own words..
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