Operational Updates

White House posts video of Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt briefing the media (Feb. 10, 2026)

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Key takeaways

  • A press briefing by White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt took place on Feb. 10, 2026.
  • The briefing video is available at the provided YouTube link: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mrVu0idVb2o
  • No transcript or detailed text of the briefing was included in the provided source, so the briefing’s specific content is not summarized here.
  • To confirm statements or policy announcements from the briefing, consult the official White House transcript or readout and independent fact-checking sources.

Follow Up Questions

What topics and questions did Karoline Leavitt address during the Feb. 10, 2026 briefing?Expand

The White House video of the Feb. 10, 2026 briefing is available (YouTube and the White House video page), but no official, complete transcript or summary of the briefing’s topics was included in the article’s provided material. To determine exactly which topics and questions were addressed, watch the briefing video or consult an official transcript/readout if released by the White House or media organizations that produced verbatim transcriptions.

Is there an official White House transcript or readout of this briefing, and where can it be found?Expand

The White House posted the briefing video on its website and YouTube; an official White House video page exists. If an official written transcript or readout was produced it would typically appear on the White House website (News/Briefings) or in the White House Press Office releases; none was included in the article’s source. Journalists often rely on the White House site, the White House press office, or reputable archives (e.g., American Presidency Project) for posted transcripts.

Which reporters or news outlets attended and asked questions at the briefing?Expand

The article did not list attendees. Typical briefing-room attendees include reporters from major TV, print and digital outlets and pool reporters; to identify who spoke on Feb. 10, 2026, check the briefing video (watch for on-camera questioners), pool reports, or immediate news coverage from wire services (AP, Reuters, C-SPAN) that quote named reporters.

Were any policy announcements, decisions, or new actions announced during this briefing?Expand

The article did not confirm any policy announcements. To verify whether new policies, decisions, or actions were announced at the Feb. 10 briefing, review the briefing video and look for an official White House readout or press release and contemporaneous reporting from reputable news organizations; none was summarized in the provided source.

Have independent fact-checkers reviewed claims made in the briefing and published corrections or context?Expand

The article noted no independent fact-checks of claims from this specific briefing. To find fact-checks, search fact-checking outlets (FactCheck.org, AP Fact Check, PolitiFact, Washington Post Fact Checker) for items referencing statements from Leavitt’s Feb. 10 briefing; if none are found, say so. (No fact-checks were cited in the provided material.)

How should journalists or members of the public cite or reference this YouTube briefing in reporting?Expand

Cite the briefing by pointing to the official White House video page or the White House’s YouTube post, include the speaker, date, and the URL; e.g., “Karoline Leavitt, Press Secretary, Press Briefing, Feb. 10, 2026, The White House (video), https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mrVu0idVb2o.” If a written White House transcript/readout is later published, cite that document’s URL instead.

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