
In a move that angered liberal reporters, the Trump administration has adopted a policy that could set the standard for how the government addresses gender pronouns, a token of the current woke agenda.
Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt has implemented a no-response policy to journalists who display pronouns in their email signatures.
This common-sense approach has leftist reporters scrambling to understand why their ideological virtue-signaling is no longer welcome in official White House communications.
The Trump administration’s policy targets what many conservatives view as unnecessary political correctness that has infiltrated mainstream journalism.
Multiple sources said reporters from liberal outlets, including the New York Times and Crooked Medi, have already been denied responses after including preferred pronouns in their email signatures.
The policy reflects President Trump’s broader commitment to recognize only two biological sexes.
Earlier in his administration, Trump issued an executive order affirming the scientific reality of male and female as the only biological sexes, pushing back against years of progressive gender ideology that flourished under previous administrations.
White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt did not mince words about why this policy makes sense.
She explained that journalists who display pronouns in their email signatures demonstrate a fundamental disregard for biological reality, which raises questions about their ability to report facts accurately.
“Any reporter who chooses to put their preferred pronouns in their bio clearly does not care about biological reality or truth and therefore cannot be trusted to write an honest story,” she declared.
This stance aligns with the administration’s broader efforts to roll back progressive ideology throughout the federal government.
Moreover, the White House has already ordered federal agencies to stop using email features that prompt employees to list their pronouns, restoring focus on government business rather than identity politics.
Katie Miller, spokeswoman for the Department of Government Efficiency, confirmed that the policy applies universally to all reporters who include pronouns in their email signatures.
Republicans across the country have applauded the move as part of a necessary pushback against what many see as forced compliance with progressive ideology.
At the same time, several Republican-led states have already introduced legislation limiting the use of preferred pronouns in official settings, particularly in schools where parents have raised concerns about gender ideology.
The practice of listing pronouns became normalized in many industries during previous administrations, particularly to accommodate transgender or non-binary individuals.
Yet, critics argued it unnecessarily politicizes routine communications and forces everyone to participate in an ideological viewpoint many Americans do not share.
The Trump administration’s act represents a clear departure from previous administrations’ policies, which embraced progressive gender ideology.
For many conservative Americans who believe in biological reality and traditional values, this policy change signals a welcome return to common sense in government communications.