White House Briefing Takes Surprise Turn Amid Leavitt Maternity Leave

A historic chain of Texas candy stores that has been in existence since 1885 announced it will be closing its doors due to “unprecedented economic pressures.”

Lammes Candies, which has a flagship location in Austin among its seven locations, is closing stores in Hillside and Lakeline Mall, according to its website. Another location in Round Rock is also being closed, according to a sign on its door, NBC affiliate KXAN reported.

The company cited “unprecedented economic pressures and current market conditions” as the reason for the closures in the message on its website.

Lammes, which created handcrafted chocolates and sweets, also wrote in a press release that the company is closing its business operations after it “carefully evaluated shifts in the marketplace and the long-term sustainability of its operations.”

The company said it would begin an “orderly wind-down of operations, including fulfilling remaining orders and supporting employees through the transition process.”

TODAY.com reached out to Lammes for clarification about when it will be closing all of its locations and whether it was still accepting online orders and did not immediately receive a response. The company said in its news release that additional information about timelines and final operations will be shared when they become available.

“This was not an easy decision,” the company’s ownership team said in a statement in the release. “Lammes Candies has been more than a business — it has been a family legacy spanning generations. We are deeply grateful to our employees, customers and community for their unwavering support over the last 141 years.”

The store in Round Rock closed on April 24 and the flagship location in Austin will remain open a little bit longer, with no timeline posted yet on its door, according to KXAN.

The company was founded by William Wirt Lamme in 1878 as Red Front Candy Factory in Austin. Lamme lost the business in a poker game in 1885, but his son, David Turner Lamme, Sr., repaid the $800 gambling debt and reclaimed the story, according to the company’s website.

Lammes Candies officially opened on July 10, 1885, and had been family-owned and operated since. It originally sold ice cream and a frozen fruit dessert before expanding to chocolates in 1965. It’s bestseller was the “Texas Chewie Pecan Praline,” which was first produced in 1892.

Since 2004, the company has been owned by siblings Pam, Bryan and Lana Lamme, who are the fifth generation of the family to run it.

In recent months, Rubio has been involved in a wide range of policy and communications efforts, at times stepping outside the traditional scope of the State Department. His briefing room visit, though informal, highlighted that broader involvement and the administration’s willingness to rely on senior officials across multiple roles when needed.

The moment also drew attention because the White House has not publicly named an interim press secretary during Leavitt’s leave. In past administrations, temporary replacements or deputies have typically handled the briefing schedule during extended absences. In this case, the approach appears more fluid, with senior officials potentially stepping in as needed.

Leavitt’s decision to delay her leave following the Correspondents’ Dinner incident reflects a pattern she has shown before. During the 2024 campaign cycle, she similarly returned to work shortly after giving birth to her first child, citing the demands of the moment. Her current situation follows a comparable path, with national events influencing the timing of her absence.

The White House has not indicated how long Leavitt will be away or whether a more formal temporary replacement will be designated. For now, the briefing schedule remains subject to change depending on events and staffing decisions.

For observers, the moment stood out less for its substance and more for what it suggested about internal dynamics: a flexible approach to staffing, a high-profile Cabinet member willing to step into unexpected settings, and a press operation adjusting in real time.

As Leavitt prepares for the arrival of her second child, attention will likely remain on how the White House handles daily press briefings in her absence—and whether Rubio’s cameo was a one-off joke or a preview of a more unconventional approach to the role.