Savannah Chrisley, a vocal supporter of President Donald Trump and a rising conservative media figure, is set to step into the lions den as a guest host on ABCs The View while co-host Alyssa Farah Griffin is on maternity leave.
According to WND, Chrisley will be the first guest host to take a seat at the table during the week of February 16, a move that places an unapologetic Trump ally on a program long known for its liberal tilt and hostility toward conservative voices. She has made clear that while she supports civil discourse, she has not forgotten the co-hosts past bashing of her family, even after President Trump granted clemency to her parents, Todd and Julie Chrisley, who were convicted in 2022 on fraud and tax evasion charges.
Ill be co-hosting the week of February 16th! I believe in sitting at tables with people who disagree with you and refusing to shrink your values to make others comfortable. I stand on faith, family, and freedom, Chrisley said. I hope this week opens the door to more unity and less division. But let me be clear: I have not forgotten the public bashing of my family by some of these same voices. Grace does not require amnesia.
Her parents were prosecuted in Fulton County, Georgia, where they received sentences of 12 and seven years, respectively, in a justice system Chrisley has repeatedly described as politically tainted. While they were incarcerated, she addressed the 2024 Republican National Convention, arguing that the legal campaign against her family reflected a broader pattern of targeting conservatives.
My family has been persecuted by rogue prosecutors due to our public profile and conservative beliefs, Chrisley said. Her criticism echoes the concerns of many on the right who see selective prosecution and double standards in high-profile cases involving conservatives.
President Trump and 18 co-defendants were themselves charged in Fulton County in August 2023 over their alleged efforts to challenge the 2020 election results in Georgia, a case driven by District Attorney Fani Willis. An appeals court removed Willis from the case in December 2024 over her prior relationship with special prosecutor Nathan Wade, and a judge dismissed the case entirely on Nov. 26, 2025.
Griffin, nominally billed as the conservative voice on The View, has become a frequent critic of President Trump despite having served in his administration, a shift that has frustrated many grassroots conservatives. Chrisleys upcoming stint offers a rare opportunity for an unabashed pro-Trump conservative to confront a panel and audience accustomed to hearing only filtered or hostile portrayals of the America First movement.
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