President Trump’s press secretary Karoline Leavitt held her first White House briefing Tuesday, fielding questions from reporters for just more than 45 minutes.

The press secretary announced some new changes to the briefings and discussed the wildfires in California, recent deportations, the federal government spending freeze, and other topics in answering questions from 20 different reporters from various outlets.

When asked how often she would be doing a briefing, Leavitt replied, “The president, as you know, is incredibly accessible,” noting Trump answered questions in the Oval Office and on his trip last week to the press pool that was with him.

“The president is the best spokesperson this White House has,” she said.

Here are five takeaways from the first press briefing.

Briefing room changes

To kick off the first White House briefing, Leavitt announced that “new media” journalists would get the first questions in the inaugural briefing.

Axios’s Mike Allen received the first question, Breitbart’s Matt Boyle received the second and The Associated Press’s Zeke Miller had the third question. The Associated Press is traditionally the first question in a White House briefing, a protocol that has spanned multiple administrations.

“America’s trust in mass media has fallen to a record low,” Leavitt told the room full of journalists, adding that many young Americans are consuming their news from other sources, such as independent outlets.

Some of the seats to the right of her podium, which typically went to press office staff, will go to “new media” outlets. Leavitt also encouraged podcasters, social media influencers, and content creators to apply for White House credentials.

She also said the White House would reinstate the press privileges of dozens of outlets that were “wrongly revoked by the previous administration,” including roughly 440 journalists.

No clarity on California’s water

Leavitt didn’t clarify what Trump meant by his recent claim that the U.S. military entered California and “turned on the water” in the aftermath of devastating wildfires. The California Department of Water Resources pushed back on Trump’s notion and said the military did not enter the state.

Trump had just visited the Los Angeles area Friday, meeting with Democratic Gov. Gavin Newsom and Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass (D) while on the ground.

Leavitt did not provide much clarity on just how the water was “turned on” or what the military did in detail to back Trump’s claim.

“The water has been turned back on in California, and this comes just days after President Trump visited Pacific Palisades and, as you all saw, applied tremendous pressure on state and local officials in Pacific Palisades, including Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass to turn on that water,” Leavitt said.

When asked what the military’s role was, she said the Army Corps of Engineers has been on the ground in California to respond to the wildfires and repeated that the “water was turned on” because of pressure from Trump on local and state officials. She did not elaborate.

Egg prices addressed

Leavitt was asked about the increase in egg prices since the tail end of the Biden administration and the start of Trump’s. She replied that the Trump administration should not be responsible for the uptick, blaming the media for its reporting on the situation.