logo
Jen Psaki holds mock press briefing trashing 'MAGA spin' on White House questions

Jen Psaki holds mock press briefing trashing 'MAGA spin' on White House questions

Fox News12-05-2025

MSNBC's Jen Psaki appeared to mock White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt with her own spin as press secretary for the Trump administration during her show on Friday.
"I have noticed the White House briefing room has taken a bit of a bizarro turn lately. And I figured, what the hell, it's a Friday night. Why not dust off the cobwebs and field a few questions from the White House press briefing room today? Because it's been a while. Of course, I'm going to answer them without the usual MAGA spin," Psaki said on "The Briefing."
The former White House press secretary used actual questions asked at Friday's press briefing and gave what she believed were proper responses in front of a fake briefing backdrop.
One question included the New York Post's Washington correspondent, Steven Nelsen, asking about any details that could be shared about New York City Mayor Eric Adams' meeting with the president.
"Eric Adams is visiting because he owes his current freedom to the guy sitting in the White House," Psaki said. "Let's stop pretending this is on the level, like where the relationship is between a president and a New York City mayor just coordinating city business in a normal course of events. I mean, even the judge who allowed the case to be dropped said that it, quote, smacks of a bargain."
Psaki closed with a question about why President Donald Trump chose to fire the Librarian of Congress, suggesting racism may have played a part in firing a Black woman.
"[W]hy did Trump abruptly fire Carla Hayden, the Librarian of Congress, who has served in her position, I would note, since 2016 and was confirmed by the Senate with bipartisan support in a vote of 74 to 18? Psaki said. "Well, I'm going to use a visual aid. Here's a picture of her. I'll let you draw your own conclusions on why Trump and his administration decided to fire Carla Hayden. Hope that was all clarifying."
Psaki took over MSNBC's coveted 9 p.m. ET timeslot on Tuesday through Fridays this week with her show "The Briefing." The show debuted with 1.2 million viewers and 139,000 in the advertiser-coveted demographic of adults aged 25-54, but her second episode on Wednesday plummeted to just over one million total viewers and only 65,000 in the demo.
MSNBC's newest program shed a staggering 53% of its demo viewers compared to the first episode only one day prior. Psaki's program also lost a whopping 67% of viewers between the ages of 18-49 after only one episode, as "The Briefing" averaged 113,000 on Tuesday and only 37,000 on Wednesday.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Senate GOP Clashes With House on Trump Tax Bill
Senate GOP Clashes With House on Trump Tax Bill

Bloomberg

time10 minutes ago

  • Bloomberg

Senate GOP Clashes With House on Trump Tax Bill

"Balance of Power: Late Edition" focuses on the intersection of politics and global business. On today's show, White House Council of Economic Advisers Chair Stephen Miran says inflation has been successfully coming down because of President Donald Trump's policies. Xavier Becerra, former California Attorney General, weighs in on the Los Angeles protests, Governor Newsom suing the Trump Administration, and his reaction to the President deploying the National Guard and Marines into the city. US Energy Secretary Chris Wright discusses oil prices surging as reports suggest the United States potentially evacuating its embassy staff in Baghdad. (Source: Bloomberg)

PBS, NPR funding on the line as House nears final vote on $9.4 billion in DOGE-backed cuts
PBS, NPR funding on the line as House nears final vote on $9.4 billion in DOGE-backed cuts

CNBC

time10 minutes ago

  • CNBC

PBS, NPR funding on the line as House nears final vote on $9.4 billion in DOGE-backed cuts

The House on Wednesday moved a step closer to approving President Donald Trump's $9.4 billion spending cut package, which would codify some cuts originally proposed by the Department of Government Efficiency. The package would grant permission to the White House not to spend billions of dollars that had already been approved by Congress. The money would be clawed back from specific agencies like the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID) and the Corporation for Public Broadcasting, which distributes federally appropriated grants to National Public Radio (NPR) and Public Broadcasting Service (PBS). Although the Wednesday procedural vote passed largely along party lines, a final vote expected Thursday could see some resistance from House Republicans who are uneasy about the popular programs that are being targeted, like PBS and National Public Radio. Given House Speaker Mike Johnson's narrow Republican majority, he can only afford to lose a handful of votes and still push the package over the finish line on a party-line vote. Johnson said earlier this week that he was "working on" getting enough Republicans on board to pass the DOGE package, CNN reported. Wednesday's vote also finalized changes to Republicans' "big, beautiful bill" that were required by the Senate before the measure was allowed to pass with a simple majority, rather than the typical 60-vote Senate threshold. Budget measures like the "big, beautiful bill" can be considered under a special set of rules known as reconciliation. The Senate's parliamentarian, who acts as a sort of referee in disputes over Senate rules, had flagged some provisions in the package earlier that she said were incompatible with the chamber's reconciliation rules.

Oaktree's Marks Says Trump Values Unpredictability, Be Cautious
Oaktree's Marks Says Trump Values Unpredictability, Be Cautious

Bloomberg

time11 minutes ago

  • Bloomberg

Oaktree's Marks Says Trump Values Unpredictability, Be Cautious

Oaktree Capital Management LP co-founder Howard Marks said investors should expect uncertainty to endure under US President Donald Trump and relatively high valuations in global markets require a cautious stance. 'As someone who is a serial negotiator, he values unpredictability, and I think you're going to have that for a long time,' Marks said of Trump at the Morgan Stanley Australia Summit on Thursday in Sydney via video link from Spain.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store