Trump-era White House press secretary says she will host Fox News' 8 p.m. slot next week



When announcing its split with Tucker Carlson last week, Fox News noted that it would rotate different hosts to fill the 8 p.m. slot until a new host is tapped for the role. Brian Kilmeade helmed the primetime spot last week. This week, Lawrence Jones has been filling in. And former White House press secretary Kayleigh McEnany noted on Thursday that she will host the hour each night next week.

"I am honored to share that I will be hosting Fox News Tonight on @FoxNews at 8pm ET all next week (5/8-5/12)! Set your DVR. Please join me next week as we dig into the state of politics, media, culture, and faith in America!" McEnany tweeted on Thursday.

\u201cI am honored to share that I will be hosting Fox News Tonight on @FoxNews at 8pm ET all next week (5/8-5/12)! Set your DVR.\n\nPlease join me next week as we dig into the state of politics, media, culture, and faith in America!\nhttps://t.co/8JtJZwo9zf\u201d
— Kayleigh McEnany (@Kayleigh McEnany) 1683227471

Fox's 8 p.m. ratings have fallen significantly since the network dropped Carlson's program, a trend which appears to be reflected in the responses to McEnany's announcement.

"Sorry @kayleighmcenany nothing against you but I will NEVER watch @FoxNews after the disgusting way they treated @TuckerCarlson Good luck... you will need it as Fox continues to tank! Not even recording anything any longer," one person tweeted.

"I don't watch Fox anymore. Was only watching Tucker before he was let go," someone else tweeted.

"Sorry ms McEnany it's not personal it's fox," someone else wrote.

"Nope, I'm done with @FoxNews," another person tweeted.

The fact that Carlson signed off of his final program last month by saying "we'll be back on Monday" indicates that he expected to return to the air after the weekend.

\u201cHere was the end of what turned out to be Tucker Carlson's final Fox News show last Friday. Certainly no indication that he didn't expect to be on the air tonight. In fact Tucker's final words are, "we'll be back on Monday."\u201d
— Aaron Rupar (@Aaron Rupar) 1682350974

But on Monday, April 24, Fox News Media claimed in a press release that it and Carlson had "agreed to part ways." The Wall Street Journal, citing unnamed people, reported that Carlson learned he was being let go around 10 minutes before the announcement. Megyn Kelly claimed that Carlson had not been fired but that he was still under contract and would need to negotiate an exit.

"Disrespectful": Megyn Kelly on the Truth About How Tucker Carlson HASN'T Been Officially Fired Yet www.youtube.com

Carlson released a brief video on Twitter last week that has amassed a whopping 23.9 million views.

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Resoundingly rejected by voters, Lori Lightfoot once more suggests she was treated unfairly because of her race and sex, not rejected for her failures



It would appear some of those Chicago residents Mayor Lori Lightfoot attempted to dissuade from voting rejected her advice and in turn rejected her.

TheBlaze previously reported that Lightfoot was overwhelmingly rejected by voters on Tuesday. She placed third and secured only 17.1% of the vote, thereby failing to qualify for the runoff election in April.

Following her concession speech, Lightfoot, the first Chicago mayor in 40 years to lose re-election, told reporters that she had been treated unfairly because she is "a black woman in America." This is the latest in a series of similar claims advanced by Lightfoot suggesting that criticisms of her apparent failures as a leader were motivated by racial and sexual animus.

Rejection observed through racial lens

In June 2021, Lightfoot told WTTW's Chicago Tonight that "99 percent" of the criticism she receives is because she is a black woman, reported WFLD.

"Look at my predecessors. Did people say that Rich Daley held tea sessions with people that he didn't disagree on? Rahm Emanuel was a polite guy who was a uniter? No. Women and people of color are always held to a different standard," said Lightfoot.

When recently speaking to Politico, Lightfoot invoked her immutable characteristics as the reason why she wasn't featured on the cover of Time magazine, entirely discounting the possibility that success in the role of mayor may have been a factor.

She said, "I remember Rahm Emanuel appearing on the cover of Time magazine, the headline was basically like: 'Tough guy for Chicago.' No woman or woman of color is ever going to get that headline."

Ahead of Tuesday's election, Lightfoot reseeded the notion in conversation with the New Yorker that she might be criticized or possibly even rejected at the polls because "I am a black woman — let’s not forget. Certain folks, frankly, don’t support us in leadership roles.”

In her leadership role, Lightfoot oversaw homicides spike reaching their highest numbers in 25 years.

The New York Post indicated that Chicago recorded 695 murders by the end of 2022 and 804 in 2021.

Seventy people have been murdered in Chicago so far this year, where just two months in, crime is already up 61% over last year. Fourteen were wounded by gunfire the weekend leading into the election, reported PBS News Hour.

Under Lightfoot, big businesses and employers such as Tyson Foods, Boeing, Caterpillar, and Citadel have been leaving the city en masse, citing worsening violent crime, homelessness, and drug overdoses.

While crime devoured her city and businesses fled it, Lightfoot was embroiled in numerous scandals.

Most recently, she was denounced over the recent dissemination of emails by her campaign manager to Chicago Public Schools teachers, pressuring them to ask students to help the mayor with her re-election campaign by volunteering 12 hours per week in exchange for class credit.

After her concession speech Tuesday, Lightfoot was asked by a reporter if she was treated unfairly on account of her race and sex, reported the Daily Mail.

Lightfoot, sued in 2021 for granting interviews on the basis of reporters' race, responded, "I'm a black woman in America. Of course."

Failed mayoral candidate Jesus "Chuy" Garcia, who placed fourth after Lightfoot, suggested that "when she failed, instead of doing what a leader does — taking responsibility and solving problems — she dug in. ... Have you seen the finger-pointing between the mayor and the state’s attorney? The mayor and the courts? The mayor and the governor?"

After the mayor's latest effort to displace accountability, critics contextualized and celebrated Lightfoot's exit.

Content of character found wanting

Chicago Sun-Times reporter Fran Spielman accounted for why, beyond the mayor's immutable characteristics, she might have been so resoundingly rejected by Chicagoans.

Spielman noted that "bad timing," of the pandemic and BLM violence in particular, "is too simple an explanation for Lightfoot's stunning political downfall."

In part, it had to do with a stunning series of betrayals: "Lightfoot opposed the elected school board after saying she’d support it; failed to deliver the transparency she had promised; and broke her pledge to raise the real estate transfer tax on high-end home sales to create a dedicated funding source to reduce homelessness."

Veteran Democrat political strategist suggested that Lightfoot's unfortunate personality was in large part to blame, saying, "Her strengths may have been weaknesses in governing. The uncompromising nature of her personality and the lack of relationships with other people who she has to deal with constructively may wind up being very, very damaging."

Former inspector general Joe Ferguson, former friend of the defeated mayor, said, "Her greater interest was in holding the power in a transactional way ... and not governing as the times called for and that she promised she would.”

Alderman Anthony Beale (9th) provided Spielman with a strong sense of why, besides sex and race, Lightfoot may have been ousted: "She felt she could do and say anything to anybody without any repercussions. Not knowing that you need people in order to be effective. ... 'My way or the highway’ coming out of the gate. Trying to destroy people instead of trying to work with people. Politics is a game of addition. It’s not a game of subtraction. All she did was subtract from Day One."

Regardless of what inspirited the mayor's many critiques, her critics appear happy to see her go.

Just the News founder John Solomon reiterated a sentiment shared on election night by Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-Ga.) that Lighfoot's ousting is a "powerful warning to blue city mayors: crime doesn’t pay in politics."

Former White House press secretary Kayleigh McEnany tweeted, "Lori Lightfoot lost her election. Perhaps she should have woken up when I referred to her as the 'derelict mayor of Chicago' from the White House podium for ignoring victims of crime in her city! Instead, she said 'Hey, Karen. Watch your mouth.'"

McEnany said on Fox News' "Hannity," "Karen here: You lost."

\u201cLori Lightfoot lost her election.\n\nPerhaps she should have woken up when I referred to her as the \u201cderelict mayor of Chicago\u201d from the White House podium for ignoring victims of crime in her city!\n\nInstead, she said \u201cHey, Karen. Watch your mouth\u201d \u2b07\ufe0f\u201d
— Kayleigh McEnany (@Kayleigh McEnany) 1677641104

Stephen L. Miller of the Spectator tweeted, "Perhaps Lori Lightfoot would have won if thousands of her voters had not been shot."

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White House tries to deny ever encouraging protests at justices’ homes — but the internet is FOREVER



A man was arrested near the home of Brett Kavanaugh on Wednesday morning after allegedly threatening to kill the Supreme Court Justice. SCOTUS justices — especially the conservatives ones — have faced intense backlash since the alleged Roe v. Wade decision was leaked, and the left’s rhetoric against those justices hasn't helped. In fact, that rhetoric may be directly responsible for terrifying events like this one.

For example, Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer threatened Kavanaugh in March 2020, saying he would “pay the price” if he didn’t vote to uphold Roe v. Wade.

\u201cSomeone should let the Eunuch GOP know that by the Left\u2019s own standards, this is impeachable. This is exactly what Trump was impeached for.\n\nThey won\u2019t do it. But they should.\u201d
— Jesse Kelly (@Jesse Kelly) 1654710309

Then there was former White House press secretary Jen Psaki who made it clear that protests at the homes of Supreme Court justices were not condemned by the Biden White House amid outrage following the leaked draft decision regarding Roe v. Wade. Trump press secretary Kayleigh McEnany took to Twitter to remind us of the president's position on protests outside of judges’ homes.

\u201cIn light of the Kavanaugh news, first question to the White House today should be:\n\n\u201cDoes President Biden stand by this?\u201d\n\nPSAKI: \u201cAnd we certainly continue to encourage that outside of judges\u2019 homes and that\u2019s the president\u2019s position.\u201d\n\u201d
— Kayleigh McEnany (@Kayleigh McEnany) 1654699634

Here's the former press secretary's statement:

“I know that there’s an outrage right now, I guess, about protests that have been peaceful to date, and we certainly do continue to encourage that, outside judges’ homes, and that’s the president’s position.”

Of course, the Biden White House press office was quick with some creative damage control. In this case, White House Deputy Press Secretary Andrew Bates used strategically placed em-dashes and highlighting to suggest that Psaki didn't say what Psaki clearly said:


\u201cUnsurprisingly - given the source - this presentation is dishonest. \n\nThe full answer (from one of Jen's *hundreds* of briefings) made the opposite point. \n\nShe said we encouraged protesters to remain peaceful. \n\nShe never encouraged people to protest outside justices' homes.\u201d
— Andrew Bates (@Andrew Bates) 1654704626

See what he did there? Yeah, nice try, except pretty much no one was buying it.

\u201c@AndrewJBates46 Can you read?\u201d
— Andrew Bates (@Andrew Bates) 1654704626
\u201c@Shem_Infinite @AndrewJBates46 Master Bates has confidence in those skimmers who "follow" him will not.\u201d
— Andrew Bates (@Andrew Bates) 1654704626


\u201c@SeldenGADawgs @AndrewJBates46 Even when they use the actual words, they don't admit to it... There's no possible plausible deniability and they still mintain the lie...\n\nUnreal...\u201d
— Andrew Bates (@Andrew Bates) 1654704626


\u201c@AndrewJBates46 It's right there, literally verbatim, right after the part highlighted in red: "And we certainly continue to encourage that \u2014 outside of judges' homes."\u201d
— Andrew Bates (@Andrew Bates) 1654704626

On "The Glenn Beck Program" Wednesday, Newsweek’s Josh Hammer joined Glenn to discuss what’s next for our Supreme Court justices, including the most important — and 'tragic' — question yet: Are they even safe?

Watch the video clip below to catch more of the conversation:


SCOTUS justices are UNSAFE & the left's to blameyoutu.be

Can't watch? Listen to episode highlights below:

Want more from Glenn Beck?

To enjoy more of Glenn’s masterful storytelling, thought-provoking analysis and uncanny ability to make sense of the chaos, subscribe to BlazeTV — the largest multi-platform network of voices who love America, defend the Constitution and live the American dream.

Washington Post op-ed calls out Tampa Bay Buccaneers' pirate imagery: 'There is danger in romanticizing ruthless cutthroats'



One wonders at this point if leftists are simply on a nonstop mission to root out and cancel all things with any association — however innocuous — to everything in history they define as wrong.

What's the background?

There's certainly plenty the left has managed to burn to the ground recently with its cancel-culture flamethrower. But how far will the self-appointed arbiters of good and evil go? In recent years, for example, sports franchises all over America have been barraged with left-wing criticism over their offensive mascots — with some bowing to the pressure. To wit:

And the battle to institute wokeness everywhere has even included college students so eager to board the left-wing bandwagon that they got hilariously hoodwinked, such as:

You get the picture.

What now?

Now back to Sunday's Super Bowl, which saw the Tampa Bay Buccaneers shock the defending champs from K.C. The Washington Post ran an op-ed that takes issue with the Bucs' pirate imagery.

The writer — Jamie L.H. Goodall, a staff historian at the U.S. Army Center of Military History — argued that "while this celebration of piracy seems like innocent fun and pride in a local culture, there is danger in romanticizing ruthless cutthroats who created a crisis in world trade when they captured and plundered thousands of ships on Atlantic trade routes between the Americas, Africa, and Great Britain."

Goodall went on to say that treating pirate imagery as no big deal "takes these murderous thieves who did terrible things — like locking women and children in a burning church — and makes them a symbol of freedom and adventure, erasing their wicked deeds from historical memory."

She used the example of pirate legend José Gaspar — the "namesake" of Tampa's annual "Gasparilla Pirate Festival" — who was one of many pirate "murderers who pillaged, raped and plundered their way through the Caribbean. And they were well-known enslavers who dehumanized Africans and Indigenous people, selling them for profit."

How did folks react?

It's unclear what exactly has been driving the backlash against the op-ed, but some observers may have just witnessed enough wokeness to last them several lifetimes — such as former White House press secretary Kayleigh McEnany and Outkick's Clay Travis:

This is pathetic... even for the Washington Post. Go find something else to cancel and complain about! Leave Tampa… https://t.co/b7wTo6rjTZ
— Kayleigh McEnany (@Kayleigh McEnany)1612719187.0

Matt Walsh of the Daily Wire sarcastically noted that the op-ed makes "a good point. I know many people who spent years swashbuckling on the high seas because of the way piracy was normalized by professional sports teams."

Others had similar takes:

  • "Is there anything #leftists won't try to ruin?" one commenter tweeted.
  • "ARE YOU F***IN' SERIOUS?!?! WOW!!!" another user exclaimed.
  • I guess we need to rename them to The Tampa Bay Football Team," another commenter said. "This is where all this is headed, right?"
  • "As a Pirate-American I am very offended by this. Yarr!" another user growled.
Erin Schaff - Pool/Getty Images

Trump calls on National Guard to secure Congress from his rioting supporters



The president called on the National Guard to help quell the violence at the Capitol after rioting broke out against members of Congress trying to certify the results of the election.

White House press secretary Kayleigh McEnany announced through her official social media account on Wednesday.

"At President @realDonaldTrump's direction, the National Guard is on the way along with other federal protective services," said McEnany.

At President @realDonaldTrump's direction, the National Guard is on the way along with other federal protective ser… https://t.co/W155ExoyKF
— Kayleigh McEnany (@Kayleigh McEnany)1609965389.0

"We reiterate President Trump's call against violence and to remain peaceful," she added.

Chaos erupted after tens of thousands of Trump supporters demonstrated at the Capitol when many marched to Congress and stormed into the proceedings. Members of Congress were evacuated and the session was suspended.

Scenes of chaos from within the riot were widely circulated on social media. One woman was shot in the neck and carried out of the melee in a stretcher.

Vice President Mike Pence tweeted and called for the violence to end.

"The violence and destruction taking place at the US Capitol Must Stop and it Must Stop Now. Anyone involved must respect Law Enforcement officers and immediately leave the building," said Pence.

The violence and destruction taking place at the US Capitol Must Stop and it Must Stop Now. Anyone involved must re… https://t.co/ZlHvU6wXBW
— Mike Pence (@Mike Pence)1609965302.0

"Peaceful protest is the right of every American but this attack on our Capitol will not be tolerated and those involved will be prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law," he added.

Other lawmakers have decried the violence and the destruction at the nation's capital.

Here's more about the rioting at the capital:

Pro-Trump protesters storm US Capitolwww.youtube.com

Kayleigh McEnany fires back at Jake Tapper, saying he's 'lazy' for making 'baseless personal attacks with ZERO evidence'



White House press secretary Kayleigh McEnany fired back at CNN anchor Jake Tapper after he said that he would not have her on his show because she lies so much.

Tapper made the comments on CNN's "Reliable Sources" with Brian Stelter on Sunday. McEnany replied from her official social media account.

"This is a therapy session for a broken network, and @jaketapper is lazy enough to participate by lobbing baseless personal attacks, with ZERO evidence," McEnany said.

This is a therapy session for a broken network, and @jaketapper is lazy enough to participate by lobbing baseless p… https://t.co/QF247k98ka
— Kayleigh McEnany (@Kayleigh McEnany)1609091862.0

"Jake's real problem: I do not leak. I do not lie. But I DO call out the lies of the media (i.e. CNN Russia collusion hoax!)"

Tapper told Stelter on Sunday that he refused to have some of the members of the Trump administration or the Trump 2020 campaign on his show.

"There are some people that are so mendacious, I just wouldn't put them on air," Tapper said in the interview.

"Kayleigh McEnany, I never booked her. Jason Miller from the Trump campaign, I would never book him. I mean, these are just people who tell lies the way that most people breathe. There was no value in that," he continued.

Tapper went on to say that former Trump adviser Kellyanne Conway didn't lie like McEnany did, but that she merely changed the subject when asked a tough question.

"There's a big difference between something like Kayleigh McEnany, who just like, this is what she does, she tells lies all the time, she can't acknowledge reality," Tapper continued.

"So I'm just not gonna put somebody like that on air," he concluded.

Tapper also complained on Monday when President Donald Trump retweeted an insult mocking him and calling him "Fake Tapper."

"The American people are suffering though the deadliest month of the pandemic and the president is RTing mean tweets about me," he tweeted.

Here's Tapper's comment on 'Reliable Sources':

Why Jake Tapper won't put some Trump admin. officials on his showswww.youtube.com

WATCH: White House press secretary SLAMS CNN 'activist' reporter

The exchange comes as Trump continues to push claims of voter fraud in multiple hotly contested battleground states.