White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt and former CNN anchor Jim Acosta are engaged in an ongoing war of words, with Leavitt taking aim at Acosta during an appearance at the Conservative Political Action Conference on Friday.
Frequent Trump critic Jim Acosta faced backlash after he blasted Karoline Leavitt – comparing the youngest-ever White House press secretary to a “kid” who is “telling you a tall tale.” On Wednesday, during an interview with left-leaning podcast Meidas Touch, the former CNN anchor torched the newest press secretary.
The news organization's colleagues need to give "serious consideration" to "doing a bit more to stand up for our friends," he tells MeidasTouch News
Jim Acosta has launched a scathing attack on Karoline Leavitt, branding her as one of President Donald Trump's "all-star team of liars".
Jim Acosta was stunned by an account of a meeting that was revealed in a new lawsuit by the AP, exclaiming that it meant Trump was "caught red-handed."
Former CNN anchor and chief White House correspondent said Tuesday the Associated Press should sue the Trump administration.
The Edward M. Kennedy Institute for the US Senate hosted US Sen. Ron Wyden and Jim Acosta, former CNN Anchor and White House Correspondent, for a live discussion about Wyden’s work and his new book,
WASHINGTON, DC: Former CNN anchor Jim Acosta slammed White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt as a 'bad liar' during an interview on the MeidasTouch podcast that was released on Wednesday, February 19, reported the Daily Mail.
After nearly two decades at CNN, Jim Acosta is finally doing his last bows and final hurrahs on the network. However, his goodbye speech may be more politically inclined than it appears. The sweet takeaway?
The judge urged the government to reconsider its two-week-old ban, saying that case law "is uniformly unhelpful to the White House.”
The decision came as a surprise — with the AP widely expected by the White House press corps to be favored to win the initial ruling in the standoff triggered by the organization’s refusal to change its style guide to identify the Gulf of Mexico as the “Gulf of America” after Trump changed the official US name.