The administration should create a complete, timely, and searchable video record of President Trump’s public activities.
President Trump has repeatedly emphasized the importance of communicating directly with the American people rather than relying exclusively on traditional media organizations.
Yet the official White House YouTube channel is not being used consistently or comprehensively enough to accomplish that objective.
YouTube is one of the largest and most influential video platforms in the United States and around the world. Millions of Americans use it as a primary source for speeches, press conferences, interviews, public meetings, policy announcements, and breaking news.
Nevertheless, many public appearances, meetings, remarks, press exchanges, and other important events involving President Trump are not uploaded promptly to the official White House YouTube channel. Some are difficult to locate, while others can be found only through unofficial accounts or third-party news organizations.
That creates several serious problems.
Americans cannot easily access a complete and unedited record directly from the White House.
Viewers are forced to rely on selected clips, excerpts, and commentary published by outside media organizations.
The administration loses an important opportunity to explain its policies and arguments in its own words.
Unofficial channels receive the audience, traffic, advertising revenue, and influence that should naturally flow to the authoritative government source.
This is especially difficult to understand because the White House already has communications, digital-content, video-production, and web-platform personnel. Maintaining a complete, searchable, and timely video archive should be treated as a basic operational responsibility.
A Reasonable Publication Standard
Midtown Tribune respectfully calls on the White House to adopt a clear publication standard for its official YouTube channel:
- Upload every public presidential appearance, speech, press conference, bilateral meeting, major signing ceremony, and extended exchange with reporters.
- Publish full-length video whenever legally and operationally possible, rather than relying mainly on short promotional clips.
- Upload important events on the same day they occur.
- Use clear titles that include the date, location, participants, and subject.
- Organize videos into searchable playlists by topic and event type.
- Publish accurate captions and transcripts.
- Provide direct links between WhiteHouse.gov and the corresponding YouTube videos.
- Maintain a clearly identifiable daily archive of the president’s public activities.
President Trump has demonstrated the political value of speaking directly to the public. The official White House YouTube channel should be one of the administration’s most important instruments for doing so.
This is not merely a question of promotion or social-media strategy.
It concerns transparency, preservation of the public record, access to government information, and the ability of Americans to hear directly from their president without filters, selective editing, or third-party interpretation.
Contact the White House
Readers who agree may submit their views through the official White House contact form:
https://www.whitehouse.gov/contact
Select “Contact the President” and explain why the official White House YouTube channel should provide a more complete, timely, and searchable record of presidential events.
Editorial note: This article expresses the editorial opinion of Midtown Tribune.
Official Sources and Further Reading
The following official sources provide access to current and archived White House video materials, information about YouTube’s global scale, and the federal rules governing presidential records and accessibility. Federal law requires the preservation of official presidential records, but it does not require the White House to publish every event specifically on YouTube.
Official White House Video Channels
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Current White House YouTube Channel
The official YouTube channel currently used by the White House.
Visit the official White House YouTube channel -
Trump White House Archived — 2017–2021
The archived YouTube channel from President Donald Trump’s first administration, maintained as a Trump administration archive by the National Archives and Records Administration.
View the Trump White House archived channel -
The Biden White House — 2021–2025
The official archived YouTube channel containing video materials from the Biden-Harris administration.
View the Biden White House archived channel -
Official White House Video Library
The video archive published directly on WhiteHouse.gov, including speeches, press briefings, public events, livestreams, and shorter videos.
Browse the White House video library -
White House Briefings and Statements
Official presidential statements, fact sheets, proclamations, announcements, and other written materials.
Browse White House briefings and statements
YouTube’s Reach and Importance
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YouTube Official Press Statistics
YouTube’s official statistics page provides current information about the platform’s global audience, publishing volume, languages, countries, and viewing activity.
View YouTube’s official statistics -
YouTube as a Television Platform
YouTube reports that viewers around the world watch more than one billion hours of YouTube content on television screens each day.
Read YouTube’s official report on television viewing -
More Than One Billion Hours Watched Daily
YouTube’s official announcement explaining the scale of daily viewing across the platform.
Read the official YouTube announcement
Presidential Records and Social Media
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Presidential Records Act — 44 U.S.C. Chapter 22
The official text of federal law governing the ownership, management, preservation, and eventual public access to presidential records.
Read the Presidential Records Act -
Management and Custody of Presidential Records — 44 U.S.C. § 2203
This section assigns responsibility for the custody and preservation of presidential records, including records in digital or electronic form.
Read 44 U.S.C. § 2203 -
National Archives: The Presidential Records Act
The National Archives explains that official records of the president and presidential staff belong to the United States rather than to the individual president.
Read the National Archives explanation -
NARA Guidance on Official Social-Media Records
National Archives guidance explaining that social-media accounts used for official government business must be managed as official records.
Read the official social-media records guidance -
NARA Bulletin on Social-Media Records
Federal recordkeeping requirements and best practices for capturing records created through government use of social-media platforms.
Read NARA Bulletin 2014-02
Video Accessibility Requirements
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Section 508: Video and Synchronized Media
Official federal guidance covering captions, audio descriptions, accessible media players, and other accessibility requirements for government video content.
Read the synchronized-media requirements -
Section 508: Captions and Transcripts
Federal guidance on providing captions and transcripts for audio and video materials.
Read the captions and transcripts guidance -
Section 508: Accessible Social Media
Official guidance on making government social-media content accessible to people with disabilities.
Read the accessible social-media guidance
Important legal distinction: The Presidential Records Act requires the preservation and management of official presidential records. Section 508 governs the accessibility of covered digital materials. Neither law requires the White House to upload every presidential appearance or the maximum possible amount of information specifically to YouTube.

