Connect with us

Politics

WATCH: CNN Panel Explodes After Guest Delivers Hard Truth About Democrat Party

Published

on

Scott Jennings, CNN’s go-to conservative political pundit, must be good for ratings, because the network is letting him run roughshod over liberal colleagues. During a recent panel, he accused other progressive panelists of covering for antisemitism on the left, causing the even-keeled group to explode at him.

A best-of compilation circulating on X shows Jennings deftly citing examples of antisemitic behavior by progressives, especially college students who spent much of the spring semester cloistered in campus tents, taking over quads and disrupting graduation ceremonies by staging walkouts. Those are the true examples of intolerance in America today, Jennings asserted, prompting three other panelists to grasp for anything remotely close to a counterargument.

(POLL: Who Do YOU Think Won The Debate? VOTE NOW)

“If you would like to discuss the gatherings of antisemitism going on in this country over the last few months, and you want to talk about who’s getting together where and what their political proclivities are, let’s talk about what’s gone on on all these college campuses. Let’s talk about what’s gone on in the streets of New York City,” Jennings argued, saying former President Donald Trump has “strong pro-Israel policies” that are causing disaffected Jewish voters to give him a second look. Trump took heat from the mainstream media on Friday after claiming that Jewish voters would have “a lot” to do with a loss by his campaign in November, according to the Washington Post. Rather than duck and cover, Jennings turned the table on colleagues who may have thought they’d get an easy opportunity to kick Trump in the shin on live TV.

“The antisemitism problem in this country is on the left. It is not on the right,” Jennings continued as morning host Kaitlan Collins and other guests tried to shout him down. Some pointed to a dinner Trump held with white supremacist Nick Fuentes and rapper Kanye West in 2022 in a what-about attempt to deflect. Jennings was unmoved. “If you want to pooh-pooh what we have seen on the streets of America in the wake of October the 7th — the amount of ugly antisemitism, people ripping down the posters of hostages?” he asked, causing the female panelist to his right to admit he had a point.

“Everybody sitting at this table knows where the source of antisemitism is in this country. It is not on the right,” Jennings went on. As for Fuentes, “You’re saying one person who got invited to a stupid dinner versus the thousands upon thousands of thousands of progressive activists in the streets – that’s the equivocation?” he shot back.

WATCH:

free hat

As liberal activists have grown increasingly desperate in their plot to deny President Trump a second term, Jennings has capitalized as a soothsayer about much of the growing intolerance that he argues the mainstream media ignores. Instead, he said earlier this month, many outlets and observers are covering for Kamala Harris by attempting to explain away her “lies.” After CNN’s Abby Phillip claimed the vice president “reversed herself” on fracking during the 2020 election, Jennings pounced. “No she didn’t,” he seethed. “It’s a weak argument.”

“It’s a lie is what it is,” Republican guest Bryan Lanza added.

After CNN agreed to let Harris hold an interview alongside her running mate Tim Walz, Jennings called the move what it was: “weak sauce.”

“I have great confidence in Dana and CNN to do this. I think it’s incredibly weak, weak sauce, to show up with your running mate. The fact that they don’t have enough confidence in her to let her sit, herself, the actual top of the ticket and let her do a single interview… in fact, I think the hand-wringing and the gyrations over this, over the last month, show a troubling lack of confidence in her ability, which also makes you wonder as a voter what kind of president would you be if this kind of a small-time decision – can we do an interview or not? – what does that look like for your decision-making process,” questioned Jennings. “So yes, I think Republicans are going to think it’s pretty weak to show up effectively with someone to take up half the time.”

(VOTE: Are You Supporting TRUMP Or KAMALA In November?)