Libs, satanists, "globalists" try to show-up Trump in NBC "town-hall," but fail in shrill hysteria

Apollonian

Guest Columnist
Libs, satanists, "globalists" try to show-up Trump in NBC "town-hall," but fail in shrill hysteria

Pool discusses the opposed, competing "town-halls" of Biden and Trump--as always, Biden gets softballs, Trump gets "interrogated" by shrieking harpy, ho ho ho ho ho





Below is the Trump show w. the resentful shrew sticking up for "globalism"


 
Re: Libs, satanists, "globalists" try to show-up Trump in NBC "town-hall," but fail in shrill hyster

Dueling Townhalls Post Mortem: Snarling Savannah Vs Gentle George & Not A Single Question About Hunter Biden

Link: https://www.zerohedge.com/political/dueling-townhalls-post-mortem-snarling-savannah-vs-gentle-george

by Tyler Durden
Fri, 10/16/2020 - 10:12

Link: https://www.zerohedge.com/political/dueling-townhalls-post-mortem-snarling-savannah-vs-gentle-george

The contrast could not have been greater - "under great pressure" from the great-and-good of liberal media to 'resist', NBC's Savannah Guthrie came out swinging in the so-called "Townhall" with President Trump, interrupting, interjecting, and intervening his responses with the first actual 'American voter' question relegated to 20 minutes into the 'discussion'; whereas George Stephanopolous gave Joe Biden as long as he wanted to answer questions, leaving lies unchallenged and controversies unaddressed.

Behind the scenes of the NBC News Townhall, there was anger, even before the first question, but this time it wasn’t from President Trump.

As RealClearPolitics' Philip Wegmann details, NBC employees seethed that they had agreed to host a Trump townhall in the same hour that ABC was hosting a similar Biden event. It was counterprograming, they complained, a clear attempt by the incumbent to force a split-screen moment and pull the eyeballs of the electorate away from the Democratic challenger.

They were not alone, and others went public with that sentiment. Actors and producers and on-air talent put their frustration to paper in an open letter to NBC asking the network to “air the president’s town hall either before or after Joe Biden’s so that American voters can have the opportunity to watch both.”

NBC executives didn’t budge. But while Trump got half the national spotlight, Savannah Guthrie made sure he paid for it with sharp questions that kept coming, one after the other.

Did he have any remaining COVID symptoms? Did he ever develop a case of pneumonia? Did he take a coronavirus test before the debate with Biden as required by the Commission on Presidential Debates?

Trump said he is symptom-free at the moment, said he didn’t “do too much asking” about his chest X-rays while a patient at Walter Reed medical center, and said he wasn’t sure if he had or hadn’t tested before the debate: “The doctor has very accurate information -- if you are president, you have a lot of doctors you're surrounded by -- I was in great shape for the debate, and sometime after the debate, I tested positive.”

Why hadn’t he condemned white supremacy on the debate stage?

Trump said he did condemn white supremacy on stage and always has “denounced white supremacy” and then complained that the press “always starts off with the question.” Interrupting as Guthrie tried a follow-up, the exasperated president asked, “Are you listening? I denounce white supremacy!”

Why won’t he condemn Q-Anon for spreading a conspiracy theory about satanic cult of pedophiles controlling the Democratic Party?

Trump said three times that he didn’t know about the group before adding that the only knowledge he had was that they were “very much against pedophilia” and that “they fight it very hard.” The president expressed frustration that Guthrie didn’t ask him about antifa and that the press had not asked Biden about antifa.

She said it was because Biden wasn’t there, a not-so-subtle reminder to the audience about why the two presidential candidates weren’t together on stage.

”How cute,” he replied.

Why did he retweet an article claiming that Navy SEALS killed a body double of Osama bin Laden, while secretly capturing the real bin Laden, and that former President Obama may have had the SEALS killed to hide the plot?

The commander-in-chief replied that it was “an opinion of somebody” and that it “was a retweet.” While he didn’t endorse the idea, he added, he was simply putting it “out there.”

At this Guthrie responded, “I don’t get that. You're the president, not like someone’s crazy uncle who can retweet whatever.” Trump said he does a lot of retweets because “the media is so fake and so corrupt” and that without social media he “wouldn’t be able to get the word out.”

The grilling went on like this for 20 minutes without a single question from the audience. At the first commercial break, White House Communications Director Alyssa Farah hurried over to the president. Three other aides quickly followed. And although voters finally got their chance to ask questions when programming returned, Guthrie did her best to keep Trump on the ropes with her own follow-ups.

The evening was not supposed to go this way. It was supposed to feature a second presidential debate – moderated by C-SPAN’s Steve Scully with a townhall format -- but was cancelled after the debate commission insisted on a virtual event and Trump refused to participate. Without a Democrat to attack, the Trump campaign returned to familiar form. They went after the moderator. And vice versa.

“Even though the commission canceled the in-person debate that could have happened tonight, one occurred anyway, and President Trump soundly defeated NBC’s Savannah Guthrie in her role as debate opponent and Joe Biden surrogate,” Trump spokesman Tim Murtaugh said at the end of the night.

Others were delighted with the journalist’s performance. The liberal website Vox crooned that “Guthrie delivered the Trump interview we’ve been wanting for years.” Barack Obama speechwriter Jon Favreau wished she would moderate a townhall with Trump “every night between now and election day.”

To Trump loyalists, Guthrie’s adversarial attitude, and the cheering section it engendered, merely confirmed the president’s oft-stated view that the media has taken sides in this election. But, in their view, the night was not at all a waste.

“Obviously, she was trying to placate liberal critics who attacked NBC for giving Trump a platform at all,” a conservative operative close to the campaign told RCP. “Savannah’s decision to aggressively debate Trump instead of interview him or allow voters to speak at the townhall allowed Trump to appear the optimist and turned the studio audience to his side.”

This was particularly true over the left shoulder of the president. Throughout the night one woman nodded with enthusiastic agreement and gave thumbs up regularly when he spoke, earning her both online gratitude and infamy.

The hero we all needed today! #NoddingWoman pic.twitter.com/hglTFn8YEb
— Dan Bongino (@dbongino) October 16, 2020

Conservative corners of the Internet heralded her as “the hero we need right now,” while liberal social media users suspected a plant who was pulling off “a psychological trick.” Perhaps that reaction encapsulates the entire evening – and even the Trump presidency itself. Although aggressive, the questioning from Guthrie was nothing Trump hasn’t faced before. And after four years, the nation has grown accustomed to a president who pushes back equally hard.

Did the Republican win a strategic victory then by drawing attention away from the Democrat? “Definitely,” the conservative operative explained. “That’s why liberals were up in arms in anger against NBC, knowing Trump is must-watch and Biden is a snooze-fest.”

When the night was finally over and Guthrie was out of questions, Trump press aide Dan Scavino shared a “behind the scenes” video of the night on Twitter. The president was working over a delighted crowd. As MSNBC returned to regular programming, Rachel Maddow tried distancing her cable network from parent company NBC.

“Well, that happened,” the liberal talk show host said to start her show. Guthrie’s question were fine, she added. NBC, not MSNBC, she sighed, had produced what “was a strange replacement for what was otherwise supposed to be the second presidential debate of this general election season.”

Meanwhile, on ABC, Democrats embraced their presidential nominee as a reassuring Mr. Rogers.

As RealClearPolitics' Susan Crabtree reports, the switch from debate to townhall turned out to be a net positive for Biden when it comes to displaying his skill at talking calmly with voters – even those expressing differences with him. But it wasn’t a slam dunk by any means. His performance was also marred by some wildly uneven moments and windy responses from him, along with an outright refusal to answer whether he supports packing the Supreme Court -- though promising he would do so before Nov. 3.

Throughout the dueling forums, Twitter lit up with Biden supporters’ sharply contrasting the calm and collegial tone of the ABC townhall hosted by George Stephanopoulos with the combative faceoff between Trump and NBC host Savannah Guthrie before she turned to voters in the audience for questions.

As the Biden forum wrapped up, “Mr. Rogers” was trending on Twitter after Mercedes Schlapp, a senior adviser for President Trump’s reelection campaign, compared the Democratic nominee’s performance to the long-running children’s show aimed at preschoolers.

“Well @JoeBiden @ABCPolitics townhall feels like I’m watching an episode of Mister Rodgers Neighborhood,” she tweeted, misspelling Fred Rogers last name.

Conservative critics were irate over Guthrie’s grilling of Trump for nearly 20 minutes during a format supposedly dedicated to questions from voters. They also took issue with Stephanopoulos’ light touch with Biden.

Biden’s supporters eagerly embraced the Mr. Rogers analogy, arguing it was a “self-own” for Team Trump because Rogers was known for his soothing, patient and kind demeanor.

“Pretty telling that this crew thinks Mr. Rogers is the bad guy,” tweeted Democratic strategist Zac Petkanas.

Meanwhile, during the same hour, Fox News host Tucker Carlson was revealing purportedly new Hunter Biden emails resurrecting a narrative that Biden, while vice president, demanded the firing of a Ukrainian prosecutor because he was investigating energy firm Burisma, for which Hunter worked as a highly paid board member. Twitter and Facebook for the prior 48 hours had prevented their users from tweeting or posting a New York Post story about the emails and calling into question previous assertions from Biden that he knew nothing about his son’s lucrative business deals in Ukraine and China. Trump’s personal lawyer, Rudy Giuliani, over the same two days has slammed the presidential nominee as the head of the “Biden Crime Family” over the lucrative contracts. Giuliani provided the emails to the New York Post, which he said were obtained from a laptop Hunter Biden dropped off at a repair shop last year and never picked up.

Throughout the 90 minute-townhall, interrupted for commercials, Biden fielded audience inquiries but received none from Stephanopoulos, nor the audience, about the propriety of Hunter Biden’s overseas deals and any links to his father.

Holding his mask in one hand and prepared notes in the other, Biden took a soft, measured approach to the questions. Though he often droned on with lengthy responses, he never raised his voice or grew testy.

Kelly Leigh, an undecided voter, asked if he would take the vaccine that Trump has so often touted will soon be available, considering that Kamala Harris, his running mate, said she wouldn’t if Trump alone were to endorse it. Biden responded that he would take such a vaccine, but also pointed to some of Trump’s more bizarre statements about remedies – some of which the president has brushed off as sarcasm.

"No. 1: President Trump talks about things that just aren't accurate about everything," Biden said. "The point is that if the scientists, if the body of scientists, say if this is what is ready to be done, been tested, gone through the three phases, yes, I'd take it, encourage people to take it. President Trump says things like everything from crazy stuff he's walking away from now, 'Inject bleach in your arm and that's going to work.'"

Throughout the townhall, Biden spent so much time on policy minutiae that the questioners often looked nonplused. One of those moments came when Cedric Humphrey, a young black man, asked, “What do you have to say to young black voters who see voting for you as further participation in a system that continually fails to protect them?”

At first, Biden said young black voters would have the power to determine the outcome of the election if they would only exercise their right to vote. Then, he dove off a policy cliff, leaving Humphrey staring at him with a blank expression. Along with spotlighting criminal justice reform as a way to help the black community, Biden delivered a mini-dissertation on how black Americans would be helped by his administration to “gain wealth.”

When it comes to violent protests demanding justice for black men and women killed by police, Biden said the solution isn’t defunding the police, and argued he would give law enforcement new tools without diminishing their budgets.

“Cops are kind of like schoolteachers now,” he said. “You know, a schoolteacher has to know everything from … how to handle hunger in a household, as well as how to teach how to read," Biden said. "Well, cops don't have that breadth."

Pressed again on whether he would pack the court, Biden rambled, repeating that he has never been a fan on doing so, but now, depending on how the Senate handles Trump’s nomination of Amy Coney Barrett to fill the late Ruth Bader Ginsburg’s seat, he may change his mind. Her confirmation next week is considered a fait accompli.

"It depends on how much they rush this," Biden said. When Stephanopoulos asked whether he believes voters “have a right to know where you stand,” he answered, "Yes," but then quickly followed with the caveat, "depending on how they handle this."

Biden also continued to insist that he would not ban fracking – a major industry in Pennsylvania and other Rust Belt battleground states – despite previous repeated claims that he would. He added that investing in renewable energy would produce better environmental results and more jobs. Biden argued that 128,000 people could be hired to fill oil wells, "and get a good salary doing it."

One final note, from PJMedia's Jeff Reynolds, even with about three times as many breaks, Biden showed significant signs of fatigue and a lack of focus toward the end, calling into question his capacity to handle the job of POTUS.

This worked to prove my premise after the first debate, that Trump getting him worked up and angry kept Biden engaged and on point for the entire evening. Tonight, without the constant adrenaline rushes of having to face attacks from Trump, Biden slowly faded away. In doing so, he proved what many suspect, that 77-year-old Joe Biden’s faculties are in decline.

* * *

In summary, we suspect Trump consolidated his base but did nothing to persuade fence-sitters (if there is such a person in America), whereas Biden likely alienated some of the more progressive leftists in his base, but picked up some 'undecideds'. Biden won the night, helped by the media.
 
Re: Libs, satanists, "globalists" try to show-up Trump in NBC "town-hall," but fail in shrill hyster

More FOX News commentary on the contrast btwn soft-ball show for Biden vs. screeching, yelling, and tirades directed at Trump.

 
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Re: Libs, satanists, "globalists" try to show-up Trump in NBC "town-hall," but fail in shrill hyster

Lots of folks, even of diff. races, see the psychotic prejudice against Trump which he's facing fm the libs, like the whore he was up against, Thursday night

 
Re: Libs, satanists, "globalists" try to show-up Trump in NBC "town-hall," but fail in shrill hyster

Trump attacks Savannah Guthrie as 'crazy' after dueling town halls and lashes out at George Stephanopoulos for not asking Joe Biden about Hunter's laptop claiming rival is running 'a crime family'

Link: http://www.yourdestinationnow.com/2020/10/trump-attacks-savannah-guthrie-as-crazy.html

October 17, 2020

President Donald Trump, on the day after his contentious town hall with NBC, got in another round of attacks on moderator Savannah Guthrie and his Democratic rival Joe Biden.

Trump called Guthrie 'crazy, claimed Biden was running a crime family, and , the moderator of Biden's competing town hall on Thursday, for not asking the Democratic nominee about his son's emails with Ukrainian officials.

Many of the crowd inside the event in Fort Myers wore face masks - one woman had on a face shield. The images contrasted those waiting for Trump at his next stop - a campaign rally at the Ocala airport, where crowds of people packed in - many without masks.

In a speech in Florida on Friday, with the subject of 'protecting our seniors,' the president riffed on the NBC News correspondent, who pressed him hard on his COVID testing, his tweets and his taxes, and on his rival for the White House.

President Donald Trump, on the day after his contentious town hall with NBC, got in another round of attacks on moderator Savannah Guthrie and his Democratic rival Joe Biden during a speech to seniors in Florida on Friday

A supporter of President Donald Trump adjusts her facial shield during a campaign rally at Caloosa Sound Convention Center & Amphitheater in Fort Myers, Florida

President Trump said NBC News' Savannah Guthrie was 'crazy'

President Trump accused Democratic rival Joe Biden as leading an organized crime family

Trump says Savannah Guthrie was going 'totally crazy' at town hall

Trump claimed he had 'a lot of fun' at his town hall the night before, which took place in Miami.

Although he did not attack Guthrie by name, his meaning was clear when complained about 'somebody going totally crazy.'

'I had a lot of fun last night with that. That was a nice evening. Had a nice, pleasurable evening as I had somebody going totally crazy last night,' he said as the crowd applauded. 'I understand it worked out very well last night that’s what the word is I suppose. Another evening in paradise, I call it.'

Trump and Biden had dueling town halls Thursday night in place of the second presidential debate that was canceled after Trump refused to participate virtually.

He repeated his criticism of Stephanpoulos for not asking Biden about his son Hunter's emails about the Ukraine during the ABC News town hall in Philadelphia.

And then he went on to echo an attack line first used by Rudy Giuliani, his personal lawyer, that Biden heads a crime family.

'I bet you Hunter is the middleman, like a vacuum cleaner. He follows his father around. What a disgrace. It's a crime family. You want to know something? It's a crime family. Hunter Biden is a middleman. These people are amazing, these middlemen. Hunter made no money until his father became vice president and now he's like a vacuum cleaner,' Trump said.

'It's an organized crime family,' he complained.

Giuliani used the hashtag '#BidenCrimeFamily' in some of hits tweets about Hunter Biden.

Trump claimed he didn't watch Biden's town hall, which aired at the same time the president was participating in a town hall with NBC News.

But he complained Biden got easier questions than he did when he participated in a town hall meeting with Stephanopoulos and ABC News in September.

'I didn't watch Sleepy Joe last night, just wanted to see what he looked like, wasn't looking too good. Was too painful, but I understand they did not ask him a question about this. Can you believe that? Think of it. And Stephanopoulos interviewed me and it was nasty, it was tough. Tough guy,' he said.

Many people in the crowd at Trump's speech at the Caloosa Sound Convention Center in Fort Myers wore masks

Republican Congressman Matt Gaetz signs autographs for the crowd gathered to meet President Trump upon his arrival in Fort Myers

A supporter of President Donald Trump dressed as Superman walks on the tarmac at the Ocala International Airport

A supporter of President Donald Trump walks through the crowd at the airport while dressed as Uncle Sam

And he criticized ABC for not asking about Twitter's decision to suspend accounts that posted a news story about the Hunter Biden emails, which allegedly came from a laptop Hunter owned and that was left at a Wilmington, Delaware, repair shop, whose owner gave a copy of the hard drive to Giuliani.

'But this is the hottest subject there is, didn't ask him one question about the corruption in the family. Didn't ask him one question about how big tech is protecting him,' he said. 'Can you believe what's going on in this country?'

Earlier Friday, the president claimed Biden had a 'very bad showing' when he slammed ABC News for not asking about Hunter.

'Sleepy Joe Biden had a very bad showing last night, despite the fact that @GStephanopoulos didn't ask him any questions on his being a 'corrupt politician'. Big Tech & Lamestream Media are working hard to hide this corruption!!!,' Trump wrote.

Stephanopoulos and ABC News have not responded to the attack.

Joe Biden participated in a town hall with ABC News - going head to head with President Trump, who had one with NBC News; the town halls replaced the second scheduled presidential debate

'You're not someone's crazy uncle,' Guthrie slams Trump for retweets

Trump echoed criticism from conservatives, who complained that Guthrie interrupted Trump with a 'question every 12 seconds' while Stephanopoulos was accused of forgetting to ask Joe Biden about his son Hunter's emails.

In his combative town hall, Trump faced a barrage of questions about his COVID testing, his taxes and his debt.

The president, however, tooted his own horn Friday morning, claiming he got 'good reviews' and, that thanks to 'strong' poll numbers, a Republican wave was coming on November 3.

'Very good reviews on last night's @NBCNews Town Hall in Miami. Thank you!!!,' he tweeted.

And he wrote: 'Polls numbers are looking very strong. Big crowds, great enthusiasm. Massive RED WAVE coming!!!'

Biden leads Trump in most major polls both nationally and in critical battleground states. In the RealClearPolitics polling average, Biden leads Trump by 9 points.

The split-screen town halls Thursday night could not have been more different: while Stephanopoulos barely interrupted Biden, Guthrie asked more questions than the undecided voters the evening was dedicated to and challenged Trump repeatedly in a way the president doesn't usually experience, given his preference for interviews with friendlier news outlets.

'Let's waste a whole show,' he snapped at her when she asked him about the retweets on his Twitter feed, which have contained QAnon conspiracy theories and unproven claims Seal Team Six killed Osama bin Laden's body double.

'You're not somebody's crazy uncle who can just retweet whatever,' Guthrie told him as she pressed him on the issue.

She kept the president on his toes with quick questions and repeated follow ups, pushing him to answer questions he tried to deflect away - which conservative backers of Trump said was proof of media bias.

They voiced outrage about the president's campaign event, accusing Guthrie of turning the town hall into a 'debate' and arguing that he faced a much tougher round of questioning than his rival.

Conservatives have erupted in anger after NBC's Savannah Guthrie grilled Donald Trump with a 'question every 12 seconds' while ABC's George Stephanopoulos was accused of forgetting to ask Joe Biden about his son Hunter's emails

Conservatives have erupted in anger after NBC's Savannah Guthrie grilled Donald Trump with a 'question every 12 seconds' while ABC's George Stephanopoulos was accused of forgetting to ask Joe Biden about his son Hunter's emails

Another bone of contention among Trump fans including White House Press Secretary Kayleigh McEnany was their argument that Guthrie dominated the questions rather than allowing voters to ask the president questions in the typical town hall format

Another bone of contention among Trump fans including White House Press Secretary Kayleigh McEnany was their argument that Guthrie dominated the questions rather than allowing voters to ask the president questions in the typical town hall format

Former White House press secretary and Fox News contributor Ari Fleischer likened NBC to an 'interrogation' and ABC to a 'picnic' as he accused Guthrie of repeatedly interrupting Trump.

'I just switched to NBC since ABC is in a commercial. Savanah Guthrie has interrupted Trump in these 60 seconds more than Stephanopoulos has done to Biden in 40 mins,' he tweeted.

'NBC is an interrogation. ABC is a picnic.'

Staunch Republican and Trump ally Frank Luntz also accused Guthrie of interrupting Trump 'every 12 seconds' while Biden was able to speak uninterrupted over on the other channel.

But soon after the debate ended, Trump's campaign boasted he had 'defeated opponent' Guthrie, saying he had 'masterfully handled her attacks'.

During the evening, the president appeared to admit he owes more than $400 million to creditors, denied knowing about QAnon while praising them for fighting pedophilia, and declined to say if he was tested for COVID the day of his first presidential debate.

Unmentioned by either ABC or NBC or by Trump or Biden were Hunter Biden's emails, which were revealed by Rudy Giuliani, Trump's personal attorney, earlier this week and raised questions over his business dealings in Ukraine and China and whether he used his father to further them. Also unmentioned was the storm over Twitter banning distribution of stories about it on its platform.

The president accused Twitter of shutting down on Thursday to slow the distribution of the Hunter Biden story. He tweeted an article from a satire website titled: 'Twitter Shuts Down Entire Network To Slow Spread Of Negative Biden News' and added his own commentary: 'Wow, this has never been done in history. This includes his really bad interview last night. Why is Twitter doing this. Bringing more attention to Sleepy Joe & Big T.'

He later clarified that his 'Big T' reference was to Big Tech and not to Trump.

'Big T was not a reference to me, but rather to Big Tech, which should have been properly pointed out in Twitter's Fake Trending Section!,' he tweeted.

Twitter blocked the accounts of Trump's campaign and the personal account of White House press secretary Kayleigh McEnany after they shared stories about Hunter Biden's Ukraine emails.

Here's Hunter: The Democratic candidate's son's photos were part of the laptop which was obtained by Rudy Giuliani's attorney and has now been released by the president's lawyer

The links blocked by Twitter contained stories about emails between Hunter Biden and a Ukraine official who claimed he'd been introduced to Joe Biden. It also contained images of Hunter Biden.

The information was provided by Rudy Giuliani to the New York Post after a computer repair store owner said he'd found it on a hard drive.

The store owner said a man who he was unable to identify brought three computers into his store for repair last fall. He said he then made a copy of the emails and images on the hard drive, and provided it to the FBI and to Giuliani, Trump's lawyer.

The original stories, which also also contained business email addresses, purported to expose corrupt dealings by Joe Biden and his son in Ukraine.

Senate Republicans announced Thursday they plan to haul in Twitter chief Jack Dorsey for testimony about social media companies blocking users from sharing the explosive reports about Hunter Biden..

They plan to subpoena Dorsey to appear before the Judiciary Committee days before Election Day.

'We have seen big tech, we've seen Twitter and Facebook actively interfering in this election in a way that has no precedent in the history of our country,' fumed Texas Sen. Ted Cruz.

Dorsey apologized Thursday for the company's speedy action, which he said lacked adequate explanation.

Twitter initially said the story violated policies on 'hacked materials' and on 'personal and private information.'

'Our communication around our actions on the NYPost article was not great. And blocking URL sharing via tweet or DM with zero context as to why we're blocking: unacceptable,' Dorsey said. He then linked to a statement from the company that said it was restricting the link because 'personal and private information' had been shared in the story.
 
Re: Libs, satanists, "globalists" try to show-up Trump in NBC "town-hall," but fail in shrill hyster

NBC Taps Major Democrat ‘Activist’ Disguised As Reporter To Moderate Next Presidential Debate

National File
October 18th 2020, 6:31 am

Link: https://www.infowars.com/posts/nbc-...eporter-to-moderate-next-presidential-debate/


NBC News has slated yet another Democrat operative as a presidential debate moderator for the upcoming and final round between President Trump and Joe Biden

As if the caustic and self-serving assault on President Donald Trump by Savannah Guthrie during NBC’s recent town hall wasn’t enough to illustrate the media outlet’s bias, now NBC executives have pulled out all the stops with Kristen Welker.

Welker, NBC’s White House correspondent since 2011, comes from a long line of big-money Democrat donors. In 2012, Welker and her family even spent Christmas with the Obama’s at the White House.

“Anyone who’s ever dealt with Welker knows she’s an activist, not a reporter,” a senior White House official told the New York Post. “The White House press team views her the same way they would AOC or Pelosi if they walked in the office.”

Welker’s parents are deep-pocket donors to Democrat candidates and institutions. They donated tens of thousands of dollars to Democrat candidates, including close to $20,000 to Barack Obama, $3,300 for Joe Biden’s 2020 campaign, and $2,100 for Hillary Clinton’s failed 2016 campaign. They gave $7,300 to the Democrat National Committee between 2004 and 2020.

Welker outed herself on live television as a Democrat operative when she tipped off Hillary Clinton’s Communications Director, Jennifer Palmieri, about at least one question Clinton would face during a post-debate interview in Michigan. Clinton was locked in a fierce fight she would later win, under suspicious circumstances, with Sen. Bernie Sanders (S-VT), for the 2016 Democrat nomination.

Republicans simply deserve to lose this election. How in God’s name do you approve of a debate moderator so biased she has to delete her Twitter account before the debate? https://t.co/PqJPv99oQS

— James Woods (@RealJamesWoods) October 17, 2020

Welker deleted her Twitter account, making a more complete examination of her past statements, views and biases nearly impossible. After a week of being missing in action, Welker’s Twitter account was later restored, sparking questions of whether she scrubbed her account.

President Trump and Joe Biden are scheduled to face each other Thursday night at Belmont University in Nashville, Tennessee.
 
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