President Donald Trump used a nationally televised address Thursday night to warn Americans about election vulnerabilities and foreign interference, only to see much of the liberal media scramble to keep his remarks off the air.
Major broadcast and cable outlets, including NBC, ABC, and CNN, refused to carry the speech live, a decision that underscored how aggressively legacy media now curate what information reaches the public. According to RedState, CNN even conceded that its executives chose not to air the address in real time because broadcasting it could be dangerous, a remarkable admission from a network that still claims to be in the business of informing citizens and trusting them to make up their own minds.
That posture reflects a broader pattern in which corporate media increasingly act as gatekeepers rather than neutral conduits, particularly when President Trump challenges the political establishment. Their anxiety about allowing Americans to hear his unfiltered concerns about election integrity was palpable, and it did not take long for Democrats to erupt in outrage over the speech.
Among those rushing to condemn the address was the last person with any moral standing to lecture the country on elections: Hillary Clinton. After nearly a decade of public bitterness over her 2016 loss to President Trump, she resurfaced to denounce his remarks, posting, Trump's embarrassing rant last night about an election he lost six years ago made two things very clear: 1. He's not focused on making life better for Americans. Not even close. 2. We should act now to counteract any efforts to undermine our elections.
Clinton, notably, has replies shut off on many of her social media posts, a telling move for someone who knows the public has not forgotten her own record of undermining confidence in elections. Her attempt to posture as a defender of democracy is especially brazen given that she repeatedly claimed the 2016 contest was stolen from her, a narrative she and her allies pushed for years.
Commentators were quick to highlight the hypocrisy, contrasting her current attacks on rants about an election someone lost years ago with her own insistence, three years after 2016, that The election was stolen from me. The internet resurfaced clip after clip of Clinton casting doubt on the legitimacy of President Trumps victory, with one viral post bluntly asking, This you? alongside her past statements.
Her campaign and its operatives were central to promoting the discredited Russia collusion narrative, a hoax that consumed years of national attention and undermined trust in our institutions. Yet the same political class that amplified that false story now insists President Trump must not be allowed to raise legitimate questions about systemic weaknesses in our elections.
That double standard may explain why some on the left seem nervous about what might emerge from ongoing investigations and document reviews. Journalist Catherine Herridge, discussing President Trumps Thursday speech, highlighted the discovery of burn bags at FBI headquarters that contained sensitive and in some cases previously unseen records related to Russia Collusion probes, Mar-a-Lago, CIA referral to FBI on 2016 Hillary Clinton election
Herridge reported that one of those bags held a note from the CIA director to the FBI that had that intelligence about Hillary Clinton planning to paint Trump as a puppet of Russia. For Americans who watched years of breathless coverage built on that very narrative, such revelations raise serious questions about who was truly undermining faith in elections and weaponizing intelligence for partisan gain.
Clinton can rant and spin as much as she likes, but her own words and actions remain part of the public record, and they stand in stark contrast to her current sanctimony. For many conservatives, one reassuring constant in this turbulent debate is that she will never occupy the Oval Office, while President Trump continues, in his second administration, to press for transparency and accountability in a system that desperately needs both.
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