Whether Leavitt says 'Ten-Point Plan' in the next White House press briefing decides if the administration labels a set of proposals as a formal packaged agenda.
Using that exact phrase would shape headlines and reporter questions and signal either a coordinated policy rollout or a rhetorical framing choice.
Karoline Leavitt, the White House press secretary, controls the podium language and can choose to use or avoid the quoted phrase.
Senior communications staff, the President, the Domestic Policy Council, and press office writers influence the script, while reporters and the press pool can provoke or suppress its use.
Messaging choices inside the West Wing determine the likelihood: policy memos, talking points, and an explicit decision to brand proposals as a 'Ten-Point Plan'.
External cues—presidential tweets, scheduled announcements, staff pre-briefings, and last-minute edits—move probabilities quickly, as do live reporter questions.
Watch for the White House press schedule, the pool briefing, and any press release or memo that repeats 'Ten-Point' language ahead of the briefing.
Also monitor presidential social posts, pre-briefing readouts, appearances by policy leads, reporters' preview tweets, and any leaked memo or on-camera prompt that could trigger the phrase.