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On the White House’s news app, Trump is always winning

April 3, 2026
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On the White House’s news app, Trump is always winning

President Donald Trump is facing a tough week of news, with gas prices soaring, a partial government shutdown ongoing and his approval ratings dipping as military operations in Iran drag on.

But on the White House’s new mobile app, which topped Apple and Google’s download charts in the news category over the past week, the picture is much rosier.

“AMERICA IS BACK,” reads an all-caps headline that dominates the app’s home screen. Top stories trumpet the president’s “policy wins,” track the decline in egg prices, and hail a “historic turnaround on immigration,” with more people leaving the United States than entering it in 2025. On Wednesday evening, the app sent push alerts to the pockets of its hundreds of thousands of users to livestream the Artemis II launch and, a few hours later, Trump’s televised address to the nation about Iran.

When the Trump administration launched the app last week, it promised to offer Americans “a direct line to the White House — cutting through the noise with unfiltered, real-time updates straight from the source.” So far, that has begotten a steady flow of White House press releases and livestreams, a veneer of carefully curated access and a glimpse into a world in which only Trump’s triumphs make headlines.

“Welcome to the golden age!” declares a pop-up screen inviting users to provide their e-mail address to receive news and updates. Another prompt directs users to enable push notifications so they can receive “breaking news alerts.” A red button invites them to “text President Trump”; tapping it pulls up a pre-drafted text message that begins, “Greatest President Ever!”

The app, which was downloaded some 700,000 times in its first week according to market intelligence firm Sensor Tower, features updates from the president’s social media feeds and an ICE tip line that invites users to report “suspected criminal activity” right from their phones. Experts said it is part of the Trump administration’s broader effort to develop a state media apparatus as an alternative to what it calls the “fake news” mainstream media — reassuring his backers that all is well even amid one of the most turbulent moments of his presidency.

From Franklin D. Roosevelt’s radio “fireside chats” to Barack Obama’s pioneering use of social media, presidents finding ways to short-circuit the news cycle by speaking directly to the public is nothing new. What’s novel about the Trump’s development of a mobile app is the interactivity, said Kathleen Hall Jamieson, director of the University of Pennsylvania’s Annenberg Public Policy Center.

“If one can develop a whole corps of users of the app who are going to essentially become an extension of ICE by reporting those who are suspected of being in the country illegally, it adds a controversial new capacity to traditional law enforcement,” Jamieson added. “What it gives you is something that’s sitting on your mobile device — in your pocket, in your purse, on your desk.”

A series of cryptic social media teasers fueled public curiosity ahead of the app’s launch, and Trump touted it in a videoas evidence of his administration’s transparency.

“The White House app has been a huge success,” White House spokeswoman Olivia Wales told The Washington Post via e-mail. “Americans have never had a more direct and authentic relationship with a president than they do with President Trump.”

So far, the app appears to be aimed squarely at the president’s supporters. A news tab within the app features a stream of White House press releases. On Thursday, that included headlines such as “President Trump’s Clear and Unchanging Objectives Drive Decisive Success Against Iranian Regime” and “President Trump Ended Democrats’ ‘Transgender for Everybody’ Insanity.” A “wire” section linked to articles from mostly right-leaning news outlets, such as Newsmax and Fox News, and some government agencies.

Wednesday night, the app sent a blast to users alerting them that Trump’s Iran speech was about to begin and prompted them to open the app to watch it live. After the speech, the top news story on the app was headlined “President Trump Delivers Powerful Primetime Address on Operation Epic Fury,” even as mainstream media outlets covered the speech more critically.

The app has been selective, however, in the stories it highlights. On Thursday, news that Trump had fired Attorney General Pam Bondi made banner headlines on The New York Times, The Post and CNN. As of Thursday afternoon, the White House app did not appear to mention it at all.

Another section of the app, titled “Affordability,” showed year-over-year declines in the prices of eggs, milk and butter. It did not mention the price of gas, which has spiked since Iran clamped down on key shipping lanes in response to the joint U.S.-Israeli military operation.

For a presidential administration, a White House app is “another way to communicate directly with the public — something that presidents never did prior to Teddy Roosevelt, but has become expected today,” said Jennifer Mercieca, a professor of communication at Texas A&M University and a historian of American political rhetoric. She noted that former president Bill Clinton launched the WhiteHouse.gov website, which the new White House app draws on for content, while Obama created a portal for Americans to post petitions about issues they cared about.

Mercieca said the app’s “heroic branding” and its prominent links to Trump’s social media feeds are in keeping with the president’s communication style. “It looks like Trump TV for his biggest fans,” she said.

If Trump’s MAGA base is the target audience, the app could function as “a propaganda or persuasion tool” while giving the administration “another means by which to control information flow and target messages,” said Shannon McGregor, a professor at the University of North Carolina’s Center for Information, Technology and Public Life. “This sort of stuff is most effective on people who are already primed to believe things that come from the administration,” she added.

If the app were instead aimed at a broader swath of the American public, McGregor said, that could intensify concerns about the potential for its use as a surveillance tool.

The app has also raised some alarms from digital privacy researchers who delvedinto its softwareand reported that they had found mechanisms by which it could potentially log users’ location. They also said they found evidence of integrations with third-party tools from providers that included Huawei — a Chinese smartphone maker that is sanctioned by the U.S. government. Some widely circulated social media posts warned people not to install it.

A White House official said the app does not collect any user locations and has no Huawei software integrations.

An ability to collect location data could be controversial if used in conjunction with the ability to report people to ICE, said Rachel Tobac, a digital privacy expert and CEO of SocialProof Secuirty, a cybersecurity firm. She said that is not unusual in the mobile app world and consumers should always be careful about what they install on their phones.

“Most apps request really similar permissions” to those in the White House app, Tobac said. “I’m not saying that’s a good thing.”

Texas A&M’s Mercieca said a key question is who owns the app and whether it will be transferred to future occupants of the White House. She said it would be “problematic” if Trump owns it but “less so” if it’s owned by the public, like WhiteHouse.gov and the @POTUS account on X.

The White House did not answer a question about whether the app will transfer to future administrations.

“Optimistically, this app could help people to connect to the executive branch in ways that could potentially be useful for them,” Mercieca said. “Less optimistically, this app could be a one-way channel to distribute content from a president who seeks too much of our attention.”

The post On the White House’s news app, Trump is always winning appeared first on Washington Post.

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