7.1 C
New York
Sunday, March 22, 2026
HomeNewsIndian-American elected to board of White House Correspondents Association

Indian-American elected to board of White House Correspondents Association

Date:

Related stories

Iran strike on Qatar LNG hub disrupts global gas supply, raises India concerns

Highlights: Iran strike halted production at Qatar’s largest LNG...

Pakistan missile program: US warns of potential long-range threat to homeland

Highlights: Pakistan missile program could evolve to target the...

Indian Americans lead US income rankings with $151K median household earnings

Highlights: Indian Americans report the highest median household income...

Iran-US conflict may push up medicine prices in India: Supply chain risks emerge

Highlights: Iran-US conflict is beginning to affect India’s pharmaceutical...

BRICS split deepens as India flags divisions over US–Iran conflict

Highlights: India confirms internal divisions within BRICS over the...

Anita Kumar has become the first Indian-American to be elected to the board of the White House Correspondents Association (WHCA), more than a century-old apex body of journalists covering the US president. Kumar, who has been covering the White House since 2012, was elected unopposed to the WHCA Board.Born and brought up in Charlottesville, she went to the University of Virginia. After college, she started her journalism career from the News and Advance in Lynchburg, Virginia and the News and Record in Greensboro, North Carolina.
St Petersburg Times, now known as The Tampa Bay Times, was her first major organisation, where she worked for 10 years before moving to the US capital. Kumar is now the White House Correspondent for the McClatchy group of newspapers. “Last year, when I ran for the first time, and I ran for the president. A few people encouraged me to run for the president of the body because they thought this would be such a statement to the Trump White House that somebody like me and a woman would be the (WHCA) president,” she told PTI in an interview.
Now covering the White House for the second president, she feels that access to journalists has been an issue in both the presidency she covered. “They (journalists) want more briefings. They want more on the record statements. They want more access to other people besides (the White House Press Secretary) Sarah Sanders. They want the press office people to return their emails. That’s a big problem to get anyone to respond and answer any questions,” she said. The board of the WHCA has nine members.

Subscribe

- Never miss a story with notifications

- Gain full access to our premium content

- Browse free from up to 5 devices at once

Latest stories

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here