SEAN SPICER: I Was Trump’s Press Secretary — Any White House Official Worth Their Salt Would See Biden’s Decline
On Wednesday, the Senate Judiciary Committee held a hearing titled: Unfit to Serve: How the Biden Cover-Up Endangered America and Undermined the Constitution. I was invited by the committee to share my experience as a senior White House staffer with respect to the interactions that I and other senior staff had with President Trump during his first term.
Testifying at today’s Senate Judiciary hearing on President Biden’s cognitive state.
Watch here: https://t.co/m8ClGcgMks pic.twitter.com/EDRi1QCbEv
— Sean Spicer (@seanspicer) June 18, 2025
I explained that during my tenure as press secretary, I interacted with the president multiple times every day. Most days, I would talk to him by phone or in person in the morning and then multiple times throughout the day, including weekends. For the most senior positions in the White House – those designated by the rank of assistant to the president, which include White House chief of staff, White House counsel, and press secretary – it is critical to have regular interaction with the president.
The position of press secretary especially demands this type of consistent and intentional communication. I, or any other press secretary, regardless of administration, could not do the job effectively without regular communication with the president.
WASHINGTON, DC – JANUARY 21: White House Press Secretary Sean Spicer makes a statement to members of the media at the James Brady Press Briefing Room of the White House January 21, 2017 in Washington, DC. This was Spicer’s first press conference as Press Secretary where he spoke about the media’s reporting on the inauguration’s crowd size. (Photo by Alex........
© The Daily Caller
