Skip to content
Tech News
← Back to articles

White House app auto-downloads to government phones, can't be uninstalled

read original more articles
Why This Matters

The White House's decision to automatically install its app on government phones without the ability to uninstall raises concerns about user autonomy, privacy, and government transparency. This move highlights ongoing debates over government control of digital tools and the potential for propaganda dissemination within federal agencies, affecting both public trust and employee morale.

Key Takeaways

In May, the White House announced that its new app would be automatically downloaded onto the work phones of millions of government employees. The problem: Federal workers hate it and can’t get rid of it.

Employees of the US Department of Agriculture, the State Department, and the Department of Labor, who spoke to WIRED on the condition of anonymity due to fear of retaliation, say that they were disturbed when the app appeared on their phones. Some attempted to delete it, but to no avail.

“I deleted it as a test and it came immediately back,” says an employee from the USDA.

The app, which debuted in March, promises a mixture of “real-time updates, live events, and direct access to the Presidency,” according to the White House website. It is, apparently, the same version that is available to the public on the Apple and Google app stores. A button within the app allows users to “text President Trump,” which autofills a text bubble reading “Greatest President Ever.”

Under the Social section of the app, users can see posts from the White House X account, Trump’s own Truth Social posts, and videos shared on official TikTok and Instagram accounts, among other platforms. The News section of the app includes White House press releases, briefings, and fact sheets, as well as selected articles from Fox, Breitbart, Reuters, The New York Post, and other outlets, all of which paint a positive picture of the administration’s policies or attack Democrats.

“It’s shooting pure unadulterated propaganda into our veins,” says another government employee. “Maybe Fox’s editorial standards are too high.”

In Apple’s App Store, the app’s privacy policy links out to the official page describing the privacy policy for WhiteHouse.gov. At the bottom of the page, there is a section for the policies for the White House Mobile App that includes only an email address and no details on the privacy or data policies for the app itself.