Karine Jean?Pierre’s recent appearance on CBS Mornings was a study in chutzpah: the former White House press secretary insisted she never saw President Biden’s mental acuity decline, even as hosts openly expressed disbelief. Gayle King bluntly asked “How?” when Jean?Pierre said she’d traveled with Biden more than 95 percent of the time and still “never saw” anything off, a line that left the panel visibly baffled.
Jean?Pierre’s claim that she was with Biden “almost every day” and that he was “always engaged” strains credulity for millions of Americans who watched the 2024 debate and a steady stream of public missteps. If she truly saw him that often, either she’s asking viewers to suspend common sense or she’s admitting to complicity in a political cover?up.
Let’s be blunt: this is the same pattern we’ve seen from Democrats and their media allies — protect the brand at all costs and gaslight the public about obvious failures. When career officials decline to tell the truth about leadership that clearly faltered on the national stage, it’s not loyalty, it’s deception, and the American people pay the price.
Jean?Pierre’s new memoir and on?air defensiveness read like a last?ditch attempt to rewrite history and keep the establishment’s narrative intact, even as more voters demand accountability. Her sudden pivot to independence and complaints about being betrayed by her party underscore the chaos inside the Democratic machine — chaos ordinary Americans saw long before the insiders finally admitted it.
Conservatives should not be shy about calling this what it is: a culture of protectionism for the powerful that excuses poor performance and evades responsibility. We need transparency from every corner of government and media; when officials hide behind spin instead of owning failures, trust in institutions erodes and the nation suffers.
Hardworking Americans deserve truth, not theater. Let Karine Jean?Pierre’s confident denials be a wake?up call — demand answers, demand accountability, and remember the lesson of 2024: if those closest to power won’t speak plainly, voters must.