Washington is holding its breath. As Karoline Leavitt prepares to step away for maternity leave, the question of who will command the briefing room lights up a behind-the-scenes scramble.
Allies, rivals, and rising stars are all being quietly measured against the stakes of an election-year narrative.
One name leads, others circle, and the final call could re… Continues…
Inside the West Wing, the search is less about celebrity than control. Anna Kelly, already at Leavitt’s side as Principal Deputy
Press Secretary, is the most natural heir: trusted by senior aides, steeped in Republican messaging, and familiar to reporters
who read every eyebrow raise at the podium as a signal. Around her, colleagues like Taylor Rogers and Liz Huston help keep
the daily machinery moving, ensuring that whoever steps forward will not be standing there alone.
Beyond that inner circle, floated names such as Kush Desai, Katie Pavlich, and Tricia McLaughlin reveal something deeper: a tug-of-war between continuity and recalibration. Yet this is not a coup, but a pause. Leavitt is expected back,
carrying both a newborn and the weight of a role that rarely forgives absence, proving again that modern political power is often negotiated between the nursery and the briefing room.