US: The White House has introduced a dedicated section on its official website aimed at calling out media organizations and journalists it claims have misrepresented recent events.
The new feature opens with bold wording that labels the targeted coverage as misleading, biased, and exposed, setting a confrontational tone that echoes the administration’s long-running feud with major newsrooms.
Weekly List of ‘Media Offenders’
The page highlights its weekly media offenders. This week’s list includes the Boston Globe, CBS News, and the Independent, which the site accuses of distorting reports about President Trump’s comments on six Democratic lawmakers who urged military personnel not to obey unlawful commands.
The controversy flared after the president used social media to accuse the lawmakers of seditious behavior punishable by death and amplified posts containing calls for extreme punishment.
According to the new tracker, critics in politics and the press had implied that the president was issuing unlawful directives to service members. The site insists that every directive from the president has been legitimate and argues that encouraging insubordination within the armed forces threatens national stability.
Tired of the Fake News?
We’ve got the place for you.
Get the FACTS. Track the worst offenders. See the Fake News EXPOSED. 💥👇
📲 https://t.co/BZX1NVe0Jg pic.twitter.com/gbQaRTTIZU
— The White House (@WhiteHouse) November 28, 2025
Database and ‘Hall of Shame’
The webpage also hosts an extensive offender hall of shame. It features outlets such as the Washington Post, CNN, CBS News, and the newly rebranded MS Now. Visitors can search a database of articles and the journalists who wrote them, with each entry tagged under categories like bias, malpractice, or left-wing lunacy.
A running leaderboard currently places the Washington Post at the top of the list, followed by MS Now and CBS News. Among the articles flagged is a recent Washington Post report on the US Coast Guard’s internal classification of symbols like swastikas and nooses.
The Coast Guard reversed its position shortly after the report appeared, a development acknowledged by the Post in a follow-up story. The paper has defended its reporting as accurate and rigorous. Beyond the weekly targets, the White House has listed several other major outlets for what it describes as chronic misinformation. These include the Associated Press, the New York Times, the Wall Street Journal, Politico, and Axios.
The launch of the media tracker marks the latest escalation in the administration’s combative stance toward the press. It adds to a growing roster of lawsuits filed against national newspapers, settlements with broadcast networks, and the president’s repeated branding of mainstream media as the enemy of the people.
The new webpage signals an effort by the White House to formalize its long-standing grievances with the press. By cataloging reporters and stories it views as misleading, the administration has transformed a political feud into a permanent, digital record.






