Megyn Kelly didn’t hold back when pressed about Donald Trump’s past. In a heated interview with The New York Times’ Lulu Garcia-Navarro, Kelly shut down questions about old sexual assault claims. She called the accusations against Trump “not credible” and said she doesn’t believe “one word” of rape accuser E. Jean Carroll. Kelly argued that focusing on decades-old drama misses the big picture.
She reminded viewers that Trump has delivered real results since returning to office. Closing the border, keeping men out of women’s sports, and ending toxic DEI policies topped her list. “I don’t give a crap about Trump getting handsy 20 years ago,” Kelly said. She praised his actions to stop the border invasion and protect girls’ sports as way more important.
The interview turned when Garcia-Navarro tried pushing the sexual assault angle. Kelly fired back that the media obsesses over Trump’s past while ignoring Biden’s border failures. She pointed to Laken Riley, a young woman murdered by an illegal immigrant let in under Biden. Kelly said Trump fixed the crisis in “two days” by restoring order.
Garcia-Navarro seemed stunned as Kelly flipped the script. Instead of apologizing for Trump, Kelly trashed the left’s priorities. She asked why liberals care more about old rumors than dead Americans. Kelly said parents should worry about schools brainwashing kids with “white guilt,” not Trump’s past.
The Times likely expected Kelly to bash Trump. Instead, she used their platform to praise his wins. Kelly said Trump’s fighter instinct is why America needed him back. She compared his toughness after the 2015 debate to surviving an assassination attempt. “He doesn’t quit until he wins,” Kelly said.
Critics melted down over the interview, but Kelly didn’t care. She thanked The Times for the fair chat while mocking their angry fans. Comments under the video showed leftists furious that Kelly wouldn’t trash Trump. She laughed off their outrage, saying Trump haters just can’t handle the truth.
This wasn’t Kelly’s first media showdown. She left corporate news years ago, calling it “dead.” Now on her own show, she says real journalism means admitting your bias. Kelly told Garcia-Navarro that voters care about safety and freedom, not fake scandals.
The interview proved again that Trump’s team knows how to beat the press. While liberals cry about the past, Kelly and Trump focus on fixing America. With the border secure and girls’ sports safe, Trump’s critics look desperate. Kelly’s message was clear: winning matters more than whining.