The White House is the official residence and principal workplace of the President of the United States and, by extension, the central policy office of the presidential administration. It organizes, coordinates, and communicates the President's priorities; directs federal policy implementation across executive agencies; advises the President on domestic and foreign affairs; and serves as the administration's public voice on legislative matters.
Advances and implements the President's legislative and regulatory agenda across domestic policy (economy, health, education, infrastructure), national security and foreign policy, federal budget and appropriations, regulatory actions and executive orders, judicial and executive appointments, and interagency coordination.
Funded through annual federal appropriations from the U.S. Treasury and congressional budgets that support White House operations and the broader Executive Office of the President.
Executive Office of the President (including Office of Management and Budget and National Security Council), Cabinet departments and federal agencies, the Vice President, White House Chief of Staff, White House Counsel, senior advisors, and the First Family.
U.S. federal executive office (government institution)