After Ratings Collapse And Church Mob Scandal, Don Lemon Now Eyeing Oval Office (Video)

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Don Lemon, the ousted CNN anchor whose ratings collapsed long before his network finally cut ties with him, now insists he is totally serious about weighing a run for the White House.

According to the Gateway Pundit, Lemon floated the idea during an appearance on the Cant be Censored podcast, telling hosts Travis Dhanraj and Karman Wong that he is being pressed by others to jump into presidential politics. The former primetime host, who spent years lecturing conservative Americans from behind a CNN desk, was asked directly if he harbored political ambitions and initially answered no, before quickly pivoting to the notion that a campaign might be on the table.

Lemon, whose on-air commentary routinely aligned with the progressive left, went so far as to declare, I actually think I would be a really good president of the United States. When Dhanraj pressed him Okay, like youre being serious? Lemon doubled down, insisting he was indeed serious about the prospect.

He then outlined what he claimed would be his conditions for entering the race, framing himself as a kind of grassroots reformer despite years as a highly paid corporate media figure. For the people to want me. What it would take is if I ran a political campaign, a presidential campaign, I would like to run it, and I dont know if this is realistic or not, without having to beg for money, Lemon said, sketching out a vision that sounds more like a vanity project than a viable national campaign.

I would like it to be a voter-citizen-driven campaign for as much as it can be. Maybe at some point I might have to take a donation. I would rather not do that, but I would rather the people of the United States to say, Thats the guy that we want. Im gonna give him five dollars or $10 or something that doesnt break the bank because I know that the economy is tough, he added, apparently oblivious to the irony that the Biden-era economy he has defended is precisely what is squeezing those same voters. For many conservatives, the notion that a media personality who spent years deriding President Donald Trump and his supporters now imagines himself as commander in chief only underscores how detached the liberal media class has become from ordinary Americans.

Lemon also faces unresolved questions about his conduct off-camera, including an incident earlier this year in which he joined a mob that invaded a church, behavior that critics argue would have drawn wall-to-wall outrage had it involved a conservative figure. While he muses about a citizen-driven presidential bid, many on the right believe he should first be held legally accountable for that episode, insisting, as the original report bluntly put it, that He deserves to be prosecuted for that.