Speaker | Time | Text |
---|---|---|
Nobody here at the White House seems particularly sympathetic to federal worker worries about drafting an email with five things you did last week in it. | ||
unidentified
|
You have people crying, people protesting. | |
If you're wasting American taxpayer dollars to sit outside and hold a beer can or complain about Elon Musk, I have a question for you. | ||
What are you actually doing for your constituents, the people that voted for you in? | ||
Because you're not serving America. | ||
Musk still believes in the original email. | ||
Doge doesn't want any classified attachments, but they do want a list of five things from last week from everybody. | ||
And he is saying in a new post on X, subject to the discretion of the president, they, federal workers, will be given another chance. | ||
Failure to respond a second time will result in termination. | ||
Sean Duffy doesn't want to be terminated. | ||
The transportation secretary sent his five things, starting with... | ||
Number one, terminated NYC elitist anti-worker congestion pricing all the way down to number five, toured Burbank, California traffic control tower. | ||
And now Democrats are promising to stop Doge with new laws. | ||
unidentified
|
We're putting bills on the floor that would say to Elon Musk, get out of our tax data, get out of our health care data. | |
You do not legally belong in those systems threatening the privacy and security of our constituents. | ||
These Democratic critics want new laws because lawsuits have not stopped Doge. | ||
To date, and a very interesting moment in one of these Doge court hearings yesterday, a lawyer arguing for the Trump Justice Department was not able to say what Musk's role exactly is at Doge. | ||
unidentified
|
Hey piglet, what day is today? | |
Today is the day that we burn this mother to the ground. | ||
My favorite day. | ||
It's wholesome. | ||
It's a wholesome meme. | ||
It's good. | ||
All right, ladies and gentlemen. | ||
We are back with your front seat to the golden era. | ||
Caroline Levitt taking the stage in just moments. | ||
We've seen some of the interesting screens that's been popped up here. | ||
There we go. | ||
The White House briefing screens. | ||
They also had a victory screen with the Gulf of America on it, which is pretty funny. | ||
So we will be hearing from Caroline Levitt. | ||
There's a... | ||
A lot of news going on today. | ||
The top trending subject in all of America is Pam Bondi, Kash Patel, and the Epstein list. | ||
And I gotta tell you, we're pretty proud of that because it's our fault. | ||
It's like, you're welcome, we're welcome, we did it together, you and me. | ||
So fun. | ||
Shout out to the chat. | ||
Nothing but love to the chat. | ||
So as you can see here is the White House press briefing. | ||
We have a lot to talk about. | ||
I'm deigned to jump into a bunch of big subjects right now because what you see is the little guy going in and out of the door. | ||
Everybody in the front row sitting down in their seats, not doing their stand-ups. | ||
The cameraman getting their cameras out of the way. | ||
And so what that typically means is that we have an imminent beginning to the actual press conference. | ||
And so it's going to be, well, a wild one. | ||
You can expect a lot of questions about Doge. | ||
You expect a lot of questions about President Trump meeting with world leaders and creating peace. | ||
I think there's probably going to be a lot of Zelensky questions there. | ||
Donald Trump has gotten a ton of cabinet secretaries in their position. | ||
Dan Bongino being sort of the most recent latest appointment that has ruffled a lot of feathers in the corporate media. | ||
Danny, can I get... | ||
One of those funny Dan Bongino tweets just about the media. | ||
They've been ping-pong balling around. | ||
Oh, and here we go. | ||
People coming in and out. | ||
You want to watch the funny little side door there that swings open. | ||
And you can see. | ||
And you'll see kind of why they're going to freak out. | ||
I mean, I expect a lot of freak-outs about Bongino in this press conference. | ||
But they are must-see TV. | ||
That is for certain. | ||
And here we have a lot of activity inside of the... | ||
unidentified
|
There's a little box door there, right? | |
That swings open. | ||
Not sure who they're preparing to have come out and speak. | ||
But there's always the social media share that's there. | ||
And we look forward to our time in the chair! | ||
We're going to have our time in the chair! | ||
Ladies and gentlemen, Dan Bongino, obviously, I think is going to be receiving, you know, in the work at the FBI and the DOJ, is going to be receiving quite a few questions. | ||
I guess if Epstein is trending right now, then presumably you'd also have questions on that and the declassification efforts. | ||
Our entire show was a declassification show this morning. | ||
Certainly what our audience, you know, us together, right? | ||
You know, we are you. | ||
We're very, very interested in all of this. | ||
And so, yeah, I guess we'll wait and see. | ||
Carolyn Levitt will be talking about immigration numbers that have hit record historic lows. | ||
And we'll obviously also be talking about President Trump's accomplishments in the first month because we ticked into the first month of the administration just this week. | ||
And so here we go. | ||
The screens here beside Carolyn Levitt have been sort of been flipping on and off. | ||
And so I'm not sure if perhaps that's what they're trying to solve for here as they're clear. | ||
Yeah, clearly that's what they're trying to fix before the Carolyn Levitt Trump press secretary takes the podium. | ||
It looks like the new media person was just seated and I don't recognize her. | ||
Is it her? | ||
Yeah, maybe. | ||
Okay, all right, maybe. | ||
And there's some assets that are going to be played there on the screen, so you can see that what they're doing there is they're testing right now. | ||
Here we go. | ||
The reason why libs are so freaking scared about Dan Bongino is that just days ago, Dan Bongino was sending tweets like this. | ||
And, of course, you have our confirmation that we are monitoring this on 17 different screens, and so we won't miss a second of Carolyn Lovett's actual press conference. | ||
The front row has been seated, and so that means that Carolyn Levitt will be out imminently. | ||
Again, I'm just repeating the words of the deputy director of the FBI, our friend and somebody who I consider a mentor, Dan Bongino. | ||
Still not tired of watching liberal media goons shit their diapers with every new move Trump makes. | ||
Watching their now hourly meltdown is the food that my soul craves. | ||
Keep it up, media dipshits. | ||
This is the man who will be doing press conferences from the FBI. | ||
Hopefully using this language from the dais at the FBI. | ||
Ladies and gentlemen, just one more. | ||
Just one more. | ||
Just for fun. | ||
Just for old time's sake. | ||
And while you may be getting a couple questions about Dan Bongino from, and I quote the media dipshits in the room today at the White House press conference. | ||
Dear Libs! | ||
This is only stage one of a multi-stage FO portion of the FAFO, F around and find out agenda. | ||
More fun ahead, so please buckle up. | ||
Thanks, America. | ||
Dan Mangino tweeting these, posting this when he knew that he was going to become FBI deputy director. | ||
I mean, you have to, like, assume that. | ||
Dan's show yesterday says that he was asking for this position. | ||
This was a position that he personally wanted. | ||
And so when Dan was tweeting these things, he, I think... | ||
Probably had himself in mind in this position. | ||
So yeah, a lot of effing around, a lot of finding out happening. | ||
I wanted to take a moment and get to a subject. | ||
Again, we will let you know. | ||
You know, here's the White House monitoring screen right now. | ||
This is live at the White House. | ||
Here we go. | ||
Perfect timing. | ||
Let's rock and roll. | ||
Carolyn Levitt. | ||
Good afternoon, everybody. | ||
How are we today? | ||
Good. | ||
During his inaugural address, President Trump promised that America would be a manufacturing nation once again, and liberal pundits mocked him for it. | ||
But those critics were proven wrong once again. | ||
On the heels of President Trump's Oval Office meeting with Apple CEO Tim Cook last week, Apple just announced its largest ever commitment to American jobs and industry, with plans to spend and invest more than $500 billion in America over the next four years. | ||
Over the course of the current Trump administration, Apple plans to hire around 20,000 new workers, creating high-paying jobs right here in America. | ||
And the investment isn't limited to one specific region of our country. | ||
Apple teams and facilities will expand all over our country in Arizona, California, Iowa, Nevada, North Carolina, Michigan, Oregon, Texas, and Washington. | ||
With President Trump in charge, America is open for business. | ||
Apple CEO Tim Cook said it best in the company's announcement: "We are bullish on the future of American innovation." On top of this incredible Apple announcement, President Trump already announced more than $1 trillion in pledged investments into the United States. | ||
And on another important note that the American people entrusted President Trump to fulfill, this administration's efforts to seal the border continue to prove extraordinarily successful. | ||
In President Trump's first month back in office alone, illegal border crossings hit lows not seen in decades, down 94% over the past year, while interior arrests are up 134%. | ||
This is a significant statistic that I wanted to share with all of you. | ||
There were only 220 illegal border crossings on Saturday. | ||
This is a 15-year low. | ||
Think about that in comparison to the amount of illegal border crossings we saw under the previous administration. | ||
Fox recently reported that a San Diego migrant shelter is closing its doors after saying they have not received new asylum-seeking families or individuals since January 20th. | ||
We all know what happened on January 20th, don't we? | ||
And yesterday, New York City Mayor Eric Adams announced that the massive Roosevelt Hotel migrant shelter in Manhattan will shut down in the next few months. | ||
We're also seeing a reverse migration effect. | ||
There are now verified reports from the Associated Press. | ||
Of migrants abandoning their journey to the United States and heading back home. | ||
This is the first time the Border Patrol has received these reports since 2020, during President Trump's first term. | ||
The returning migrants claimed in interviews that the new heavy security posture adopted by the Trump administration was a significant reason for their decision to return to the countries of their origin. | ||
Overall, the American people continue to overwhelmingly give President Trump very positive remarks. | ||
Nearly every one of President Trump's policy initiatives are receiving strong majority support. | ||
And I have noted that in every briefing since Inauguration Day. | ||
81% of Americans support deporting illegal migrant criminals from our nation's interior. | ||
76% of Americans support the Doge-led efforts of a full-scale investigation to find and eliminate fraud and waste in government expenditures. | ||
Again, this is from a Harvard-Harris poll, a very legitimate pollster. | ||
76% of Americans support closing the border. | ||
69% of Americans support President Trump's commonsense efforts to ban men from women's sports. | ||
As you all know, we celebrated that executive order at the White House a couple of weeks ago. | ||
65% of Americans support the president's efforts to eliminate all preferences by race in the hiring and awarding of government contracts, which is another pledge that Doge is working hard to fulfill. | ||
And 61% of Americans, vast majority, support the president's plan for reciprocal tariffs to ensure that other countries are treating us the way we have always been treated. | ||
Despite what many Democrats and media members want you to believe, The Trump agenda is not only necessary, but it is overwhelmingly popular. | ||
Why? | ||
Because it's driven by common sense. | ||
And finally, as you all saw yesterday, a federal judge denied the Associated Press's emergency motion for a temporary restraining order against myself, our Deputy Chief of Staff, Taylor Butowich. | ||
And our Chief of Staff, Susie Wiles, for our decision to remove the Associated Press from the White House press pool for certain and special events. | ||
The judge's ruling upholding our decision to deny the Associated Press such privileged access reinforces the truth. | ||
And it reiterates what I said from this podium last week when that suit was filed. | ||
Asking the President of the United States questions in limited spaces such as the Oval Office in Air Force One. | ||
is a privilege that unfortunately has only been granted to a few. | ||
It is not a legal right for all. | ||
The Trump administration has already proven to be the most transparent ever and this president the most accessible in history. | ||
This is evidenced by President Trump's daily press conferences in the Oval Office where he takes many questions from the journalists who have the honor and privilege of standing before the beautiful resolute desk. | ||
The president And this entire White House are committed to ensuring the American people continue to receive this same level of historic transparency, access, and visibility. | ||
In fact, we want to double down and give even greater access to the American people. | ||
We want more outlets and new outlets to have a chance to take part in the press pool to cover this administration's unprecedented achievements up close, front and center. | ||
As you all know, for decades, a group of DC-based journalists, the White House Correspondents Association, has long dictated which journalists get to ask questions of the President of the United States in these most intimate spaces. | ||
Not anymore. | ||
I am proud to announce that we are going to give the power back to the people who read your papers, who watch your television shows, and who listen to your radio stations. | ||
Moving forward... | ||
The White House press pool will be determined by the White House press team. | ||
Legacy outlets who have participated in the press pool for decades will still be allowed to join, fear not, but we will also be offering the privilege to well-deserving outlets who have never been allowed to share in this awesome responsibility. | ||
Just like we added a new media seat in this briefing room, legacy media outlets who have been here for years will still participate in the pool. | ||
But new voices are going to be welcomed in as well. | ||
As part of these changes, we will continue the rotation amongst the five major television networks to ensure the President's remarks are heard far and wide around this world. | ||
We will add additional streaming services which reach different audiences than traditional cable and broadcast. | ||
This is the ever-changing landscape of the media in the United States today. | ||
We will continue to rotate a print pooler. | ||
Who has the great responsibility of quickly transcribing the President's remarks and disseminating them to the rest of the world. | ||
And we will add outlets to the print pool rotation who have long been denied the privilege to partake in this experience but are committed to covering this White House beat. | ||
We will continue to rotate a radio pooler and add other radio hosts who have been denied access, especially local radio hosts who serve as the heartbeat of our country. | ||
And we will add additional outlets and reporters who are well suited to cover the news of the day and ask substantive questions of the President of the United States depending on the news he is making on that given day. | ||
This administration is shaking up Washington in more ways than one. | ||
That's what we were elected to do. | ||
As I have said since the first day behind this podium, it's beyond time that the White House press operation reflects the media habits of the American people in 2025, not 1925. | ||
A select group of DC-based journalists should no longer have a monopoly over the privilege of press access at the White House. | ||
All journalists, outlets, and voices deserve a seat at this highly coveted table. | ||
So by deciding which outlets make up the limited press pool on a day-to-day basis, the White House will be restoring power back to the American people who President Trump was elected to serve. | ||
So in that note, in our new media seat today, we have Shelby Talcott, who is a White House reporter for Semaphore. | ||
In 2022, Semaphore launched as a global digital news platform with the aim of bringing meaningful innovations to the news industry. | ||
Today, they have nearly 1 million newsletter subscribers spanning 11 separate editions. | ||
With that, Shelby, I will take your questions. | ||
unidentified
|
Over the weekend, the President's Special Missions Envoy Rick Grinnell was talking about Venezuela and he said that the President isn't someone who wants regime change. | |
Other administration officials have made clear that they don't see Maduro as the rightful leader. | ||
What is this administration's I think the president has made his position on Venezuela quite clear. | ||
He stands in opposition to the Maduro regime. | ||
And Secretary Rubio has spoken on this extensively as well. | ||
unidentified
|
And then on Doge, last night Elon Musk said that a failure to respond a second time will result in termination. | |
Will there be additional rounds of the what did you do this week email from Doge to federal workers? | ||
And what's the guidance on The federal workers who've been instructed by their agencies not to reply. | ||
So a couple of things on this. | ||
First of all, let's just take a step back and talk about this idea. | ||
The president sent out a truth last weekend to Elon Musk saying he loves everything Elon is doing and he wants him to be even more aggressive because Doge thus far has proven incredibly successful in making our government more efficient. | ||
And so Elon and Doge came up with this idea. | ||
Elon has implemented this at his private companies. | ||
It has proven successful. | ||
And it's a very simple idea when you think about it. | ||
What the personnel management is asking, all this administration is asking, President Trump is asking, is for federal workers who live off of the American taxpayer's dime to send five bullet points of what they have done in the previous week. | ||
That is all we are asking for. | ||
And so the Office of Personnel and Management sent out additional guidance last night. | ||
Those responses should be directed to agency leadership. | ||
And the president defers to his cabinet secretaries, who he's obviously entrusted, to pursue the guidance relative to their specific workforce. | ||
And for some of the agencies that you've seen who have said, please don't send these emails. | ||
It's in their best interest for that specific agency. | ||
And the president supports that. | ||
And let me be very clear. | ||
The president and Elon is his entire... | ||
The entire cabinet are working as one unified team, and they are implementing these very common sense solutions. | ||
You're welcome. | ||
Jackie. | ||
unidentified
|
Thank you. | |
One follow-up question. | ||
So about the deadline, Alina Haba said that you have until tonight. | ||
Elon Musk said a failure to respond a second time would result in termination. | ||
So is that a real deadline? | ||
Should federal workers be looking to that guidance, or should they be looking to-- What is the actual deadline? | ||
So, again, the agency heads will determine the best practices for their employees at their specific agencies. | ||
Again, this was an idea that Elon come up with. | ||
Doge worked with OPM to actually implement the idea, and the secretaries are responsible for their specific workforce. | ||
And this is true of the hirings and the firings that have taken place. | ||
And we advise federal workers, unless your agency has dictated you not to, to respond to this email. | ||
In fact, I can announce that we've had more than one One million workers who have chosen to participate in this very simple task of, again, sending five bullet points to your direct supervisor or manager, CC-ing OPM. | ||
I actually participated in it myself. | ||
It took me about... | ||
A minute and a half to think of five things I did last week. | ||
I do five things in about ten minutes. | ||
And all federal workers should be working at the same pace that President Trump is working and moving. | ||
We have a country to save, and we want this federal government to be responsive to the needs of the American people who re-elected this president to have historic, massive reform. | ||
And that's what the intention of this idea is. | ||
unidentified
|
Can you clarify one thing, though, because Elon Musk also said that a reason that they wanted this five things email was just to see if people are actually alive, citing that there are some federal workers who might not. | |
So, meantime, NBC is reporting that these responses are going to go into an AI generator to evaluate whether these jobs are necessary. | ||
So, is it just... | ||
To see if people are actually working, or is it an effort to maybe cut some of those jobs? | ||
I have not seen that NBC News report, and I haven't heard that from Doge or from Elon himself. | ||
Again, this is to ensure that federal workers are not ripping off American taxpayers, that they are showing up to the office, and that they are doing their jobs. | ||
That's what the American people expect, and it's a very simple task to complete. | ||
I did it myself, and I was more than happy to do it, because I'm very grateful that I am serving the American people on the American taxpayer's dime. | ||
unidentified
|
Joe should hire a spokesperson just so that Elon Musk doesn't put out tweets that then confuse federal workers. | |
Are my press briefings not good enough for you, Jackie? | ||
John. | ||
unidentified
|
Colonel, thank you. | |
In the ruling by Judge McFadden yesterday, who dismissed the lawsuit that AP brought against yourself and your team members here, President Trump, in there he said, why not just do away with the entire White House Correspondents Association? | ||
Along with it, because essentially they have no authority, they just usurped it. | ||
What is your reaction to that? | ||
Well, first of all, John, it's great to see you. | ||
And you are one of those individuals who has a – you're on a streaming platform that hundreds of thousands of people tune into every day. | ||
So it's great to see you in the briefing room. | ||
I did address that, actually, in my opening remarks by announcing that the White House press team in this administration will determine who gets to enjoy the very privileged and limited access in spaces such as Air Force One and the Oval Office. | ||
There are, as you know, look at this room, hundreds of journalists who show up to this building every single day and are not granted that luxury of flying on Air Force One and asking the President of the United States questions. | ||
And so we want to ensure, again, everyone has a seat at that highly coveted table. | ||
But alas, the legacy media outlets who have been doing this for quite some time and have invested resources into covering the world. | ||
Thank you. | ||
Thank you. | ||
unidentified
|
Could you give us an update on the negotiations around the Ukraine minerals deal? | |
And when is President Zelensky going to come visit? | ||
So the president talked at length about this yesterday, the critical minerals deal with President Macron, and in the more than hour-long press conference he gave all of you in the Oval Office himself. | ||
There hasn't been significant updates since the president's remarks last night, but I will just reiterate his position. | ||
It's critical that this deal is signed. | ||
He expects President Zelensky to sign a deal. | ||
This is to recoup American tax dollars that have been funding Ukraine's national defense. | ||
And it's also great for the Ukrainian people who have been put through hell because of this war. | ||
And it will create a lasting economic partnership as Ukraine will need to rebuild their country And just to follow up, has Steve Whitcoff delayed his trip to the Middle East so he can concentrate on this minerals deal? | ||
I don't want to comment on Mr. Whitcoff's travel plans or read anything out, just for obvious reasons, but he remains very much working. | ||
That man is working around the clock to secure this deal with Russia and Ukraine alongside Secretary Rubio and Secretary Secretary Besant, General Keith Kellogg. | ||
He's also working very hard to secure a peace deal in the Middle East as well. | ||
So God bless him, and he's working alongside the President every single day. | ||
Sure. | ||
unidentified
|
Thanks, Caroline. | |
The president's executive order creating DOGE called for the naming of a DOGE Who is the Doge administrator? | ||
So the president tasked Elon Musk to oversee the Doge effort. | ||
There are career officials and there are political appointees who are helping run Doge on a day-to-day basis. | ||
There are also individuals who have onboarded as political appointees at every agency across the board to work alongside President Trump's cabinet to find and identify waste-trodden abuse. | ||
They are working on that effort every day. | ||
Reagan. | ||
Reagan. | ||
unidentified
|
Thanks, Caroline. | |
I have two for you today, one on the border wall and one on the DHS investigation. | ||
Sure. | ||
unidentified
|
First on the border wall, border wall construction has restarted in Texas and California under contracts awarded under Trump's first term. | |
Is the president looking to secure new contracts, and how is he defining success in terms of border wall construction in this administration? | ||
The border wall is a signature promise of President Trump's campaign. | ||
He talked about it way back in 2015 and 2016, and people laughed at him for bringing up this idea. | ||
It's proven to be not only an idea that he delivered on in his first term and continues to deliver on in his second term, but it's also proven to be highly effective. | ||
In fact, we know where there were parts of President Trump's border wall built and standing under the previous administration, illegal border crossings dropped 87 percent. | ||
Where there was a border wall. | ||
So the wall is an incredible deterrent factor for illegal migrant caravans. | ||
The president is committed to the continuation of the construction of the wall. | ||
And, you know, the previous administration actually sold off the resources that the Trump administration secured to build the wall. | ||
And that's an egregious misuse of the American taxpayers' money. | ||
They just let those resources rot on the southern border. | ||
They actually sold them for pennies on the dollar. | ||
So this administration, DHS and ICE. | ||
And Customs and Border Patrol and Tom Homan and all of the great people you know who are working on this effort are committed to continuing the construction of President Trump's border wall. | ||
unidentified
|
The DHS investigation into people who might be leaking within the administration. | |
Will the White House release the names of the individuals that DHS Secretary Noem said were caught leaking details of the ICE raid? | ||
And can you share how many leakers have been caught so far and what agency they were a part of? | ||
I would defer you to DHS on the leakers that they have identified, but I know the president and this White House commend Secretary Noem for launching an internal investigation to identify those leakers because it's unacceptable for career bureaucrats who are standing in the way of the will of the American people in enacting President Trump's agenda. | ||
If they don't want to adhere to the will of the 77 million Americans who re-elected President Trump, then they should go find another job. | ||
And if they continue to leak information... | ||
Especially information that is critical to protecting Border Patrol agents and ICE agents who are out there doing jobs that not many people are willing to do, putting their lives on the line to protect our national security, then those individuals absolutely should be fired. | ||
And this administration is committed to finding them. | ||
unidentified
|
I have two questions for you, one related to Guantanamo Bay, the other to the White House Correspondence Center. | |
I wanted to get your response to some Washington Post reporting of the migrants who stayed over at Guantanamo Bay for the last two weeks. | ||
They told the Post they were rarely let outside, they were shackled and placed in what they described as cages, and alleged that they were not treated as human beings. | ||
Does the White House have any response to those conditions? | ||
At Guantanamo Bay? | ||
It's a promise the President campaigned on, that if you invade our nation's borders, if you break our country's laws, and if then you further commit heinous, brutal crimes in the interior of our country, like raping and murdering innocent, law-abiding women and girls, and committing heinous acts of violence, then you are going to be deported from this country, and you may be held at Guantanamo Bay. | ||
These are criminals we are talking about. | ||
Don't forget that. | ||
Sure. | ||
unidentified
|
Americans fell this month, the most since August of 2021. | |
What is your message for Americans who are concerned about the impact of things such as tariffs on prices? | ||
Yeah, sure. | ||
Well, thank you for that question. | ||
It's obviously an important one. | ||
The president campaigned on reigniting the Trump economy and fixing the mess that was created by the previous administration. | ||
We know they created an economic and an inflation nightmare for the American people, and I'm not going to stand up here and lie to you like my predecessor did about the state of our economy. | ||
we understand there are people that are hurting. | ||
And this administration is wholeheartedly committed to ensuring that those individuals see relief in price reductions, in tax cuts, and in less regulations that are burdensome on their household and their businesses. | ||
And the president and this entire administration are focused on that every day. | ||
I can go through the very long list of economic actions this president has taken. | ||
I know you work for Bloomberg, so I'm sure you're well aware of them. | ||
But I can assure the American people that the president is very much focused on bringing down the cost of living crisis in this country that was created by the previous administration. | ||
unidentified
|
And if so, to whom is he making calls? | |
I'm not aware of any calls that he has made. | ||
I did talk to the president about his position on this just before coming down here. | ||
And he said that he's made it very clear to the Hill what his priorities for a budget are. | ||
He said it to the Speaker of the House. | ||
He said it to Leader Thune. | ||
The Senate and the House know what President Trump want and know what the American people want. | ||
And so he expects Congress to get it done. | ||
He's looking at the proposal from the House. | ||
He will also be looking at the proposal that... | ||
But I believe the Senate is drafting up as well. | ||
Sure. | ||
unidentified
|
Thank you. | |
Thank you, Carolina. | ||
I have two questions. | ||
Doesn't the United States – I'm sorry. | ||
Well, why don't you identify your question and I'll come back to you. | ||
Sure, go ahead. | ||
unidentified
|
So what guarantee that Israel will withdraw from Lebanon soil after two weeks? | |
As the ceasefire terms, like, indicates. | ||
I'm not sure about the guarantee that you're referring to. | ||
I can tell you that this administration remains very much engaged. | ||
We know the deadline for the Phase 1 ceasefire is imminent. | ||
So Steve Woodcoff, whom I mentioned earlier, and the President's administration and his team and the President himself remain very much engaged. | ||
We want to see the ceasefire continue, and the President has made it very clear he wants to see all of the hostages who have been held in captivity in Gaza returned home. | ||
unidentified
|
Jeff. | |
Is Elon Musk going to attend the president's first cabinet meeting tomorrow? | ||
He is, as a matter of fact. | ||
I spoke to the president about that before coming down here as well. | ||
And Elon, considering he is working alongside the president and our cabinet secretaries, this This entire administration will be in attendance tomorrow just to talk about DOGE's efforts and how all of the Cabinet secretaries are identifying waste, fraud, and abuse at their respective agencies. | ||
We look forward to the meeting tomorrow, and I think you'll be hearing from the President and his Cabinet. | ||
We're there on campus tomorrow. | ||
I hope you guys are excited. | ||
unidentified
|
So some of those Cabinet members were caught off guard by the email from Saturday? | |
Nobody was caught off guard. | ||
unidentified
|
A few departments said they were caught off guard. | |
The FBI was, the DOJ was. | ||
Did anonymous sources say that, or did the Cabinet Secretary say that? | ||
unidentified
|
The Cabinet Secretaries and others have said that they were not aware that this was happening. | |
So I'm wondering, will there be a give-and-take tomorrow at the Cabinet meeting? | ||
Is Elon Musk, or the President, open to any type of dialogue about who is actually in charge of-- I would reject the premise of your question, Jeff. | ||
The cabinet secretaries have not said that. | ||
I know anonymous sources, probably career bureaucrats, have leaked that to many of you in this room. | ||
But as I said at the beginning of this press conference, everybody is working as one team and the president respects the decisions of his cabinet secretaries to tell his staff, their staff, not to respond to that email because they did so out of interest of national security and they don't want to obviously risk confidential information. | ||
It's pretty common sense. | ||
Dasha. | ||
unidentified
|
He's been working every day and a lot of the time weekends. | |
He is designated as a special government employee, which means that he can only work 130 days per year. | ||
Is the White House expecting him to limit his work to 130 days, or are you going to work around those rules? | ||
Do you want to see him extend beyond the 130 days? | ||
So today is February 25th, so I think we've been here about 35 days, roughly. | ||
So ask me in another hundred days. | ||
unidentified
|
You opened up with a major announcement from Apple, $500 billion, 20,000 jobs, doubling its advanced manufacturing funding. | |
What is that signal that such a global brand would make what it called its largest ever spend commitment? | ||
Just a month into President Trump's second term, what's that signal about his economic vision for the country? | ||
President Trump is a dealmaker, and he has restored confidence in business leaders around this entire world. | ||
Apple is one of the largest companies on the face of the planet. | ||
They employ hundreds of thousands of Americans, but the president wants to see more Americans employed, more investments here in the United States of America. | ||
And this is another fulfillment of the president's campaign promises. | ||
I recall President Trump at his rallies. | ||
on the campaign telling the world that If and when I am elected, America is going to be back, and we want your investments to be driven onshore. | ||
We want you to hire American workers, and you will have the lowest regulatory burden, the lowest tax cuts. | ||
And the president has already proven he's committed to slashing regulation. | ||
He's counting on Congress to implement those tax cuts. | ||
And so people are encouraged by the president's, again, as Tim Cook called it, they're bullish about American innovation because of the leadership of this president. | ||
And it's a stark con-- In contrast to the leadership of the previous administration, Joe Biden, who I don't think spent any time trying to recruit any investments or jobs here at home. | ||
unidentified
|
I think from some Republicans who are voicing concerns about how these cuts are being carried out. | |
Congressman McCormick, a Republican from Georgia, tells us he's worried it's too rapid for real people to adapt to. | ||
And he says he's concerned that it could come off as discompassionate, in his words, that it could risk undercutting the strong message that he feels you're trying to send about the need to cut government waste. | ||
Well, I think that that was one comment from one senator. | ||
And I think, as I cited in my opening remarks in the poll, the most important people are the American people. | ||
And 77% of Americans at home support a full investigation into the waste, fraud, and abuse that the federal government has been spending their tax dollars on. | ||
So that's the people the President cares about most, and that's why we're fulfilling this pledge. | ||
And again, it should come as no secret to anybody, the President campaigned on doing this. | ||
unidentified
|
The President yesterday said if you don't respond to this email, you will be fired or semi-fired. | |
What does he mean by that? | ||
Again, I've been asked to answer this question three times now. | ||
unidentified
|
Semi-fired. | |
What does that mean? | ||
But it's in the memo. | ||
The President, again, has entrusted his Cabinet secretaries to oversee their workforce. | ||
That's why he nominated them to be Cabinet secretaries. | ||
And so federal workers can be directed to their agency leadership. | ||
unidentified
|
Hi, I'm here. | |
Sure. | ||
unidentified
|
Great, thanks, Caroline. | |
I wanted to ask about a federal judge yesterday The CIA was saying that they didn't know who the Doge administrator was and was asking the lawyer for the administration who it was, and the lawyer responded, "I don't know the answer to that." Can you tell us who the administrator of Doge is? | ||
MS. Again, I've been asked and answered this question. | ||
Elon Musk is overseeing Doge. | ||
There are career-- MS. There are-- No. | ||
Elon Musk is a special government employee, which I've also been asked and have answered that question as well. | ||
There are career officials at Doge. | ||
There are political appointees at Doge. | ||
I'm not going to reveal the name of that individual from this podium. | ||
I'm happy to follow up and provide that to you. | ||
But we've been incredibly transparent about the way that Doge is working. | ||
John. | ||
unidentified
|
Thanks a lot, Caroline. | |
Since your last briefing, there have been some personnel moves that have been announced by the President, and I wanted to ask you about them. | ||
One was the President replacing the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, General C.Q. Brown, Jr. | ||
What was the reason for the President naming a replacement for General Brown? | ||
And then I'll follow up with another personnel announcement that's been made over the last few days. | ||
He thinks he's doing a bad job, and it's time for a shakeup at the Pentagon. | ||
They failed seven audits in a row. | ||
The trust in our United States military amongst the warfighters is low. | ||
The President is shaking up the Pentagon and the Department of Defense, of course, with Secretary Hegseth leading, and he has the right to do that. | ||
It's actually quite common from administration to administration to do such a thing. | ||
unidentified
|
Chief of Staff for the Air Force called him a great man and a great gentleman. | |
Does he distance himself from the remarks that he made back in August of 2020? | ||
I think replacing him speaks for itself. | ||
unidentified
|
James, thank you. | |
On the FBI, the President also announced a new Deputy Director of the FBI, Dan Bongino. | ||
From what has been reported, and maybe this is not accurate reporting, you can tell me, the FBI Director, Kash Patel, What informed Republican senators that it would be an individual named as the deputy who was a special agent currently at the FBI, and of course Mr. Bongino is not. | ||
What was the reason for naming Mr. Bongino to this position? | ||
And was Mr. Patel not correct in making that assurance to the I'm not sure if anybody in this room has listened to Mr. Bongino when he talks about the past corruption at the FBI, when he talks about his experience serving for the United States Secret Service. | ||
This is a man who loves his country and who has honorably served our country in ways that many people have not. | ||
He understands the depth of the corruption at these institutions. | ||
The American people re-elected President Trump to shake up. | ||
And I think it's quite despicable to see many networks in this room who have had chyrons on their television screens labeling Mr. Bongino as a far-right podcaster. | ||
He is not. | ||
He is a former law enforcement agent. | ||
He is a former Secret Service agent who put his life on the line to protect this country. | ||
And that is why the President of the United States has entrusted him for this important role. | ||
He's also an outsider. | ||
to this Washington swamp. | ||
And we often see that when outsiders are appointed to such coveted positions, a lot of people in this city get very, very nervous. | ||
And they should be, because Dan Bongino and Kash Patel and Attorney General Bondi are focused on rooting out the corruption at these agencies and ending the weaponization of government once and for all. | ||
I'd like to end with something. | ||
As you all know... | ||
You know what, James? | ||
I'm feeling generous. | ||
Go ahead. | ||
unidentified
|
Sure. | |
Don't make me regret this. | ||
I wanted to ask about the Macron visit and the Russia-Ukraine talks in general. | ||
It's pretty clear to my eye that President Macron was performing a kind of delicate dance, lavishing praise on the President while seeking in his own remarks to try to bind President Trump. | ||
to positions and even specific language that the President has not committed to heretofore. | ||
One of the most bracing comments from President Macron was when he said that the deal that President Trump is negotiating with the Russians must not be, quote, "a surrender for Ukraine." All of the public points that we have heard from President Trump, from Secretary Hegseth, and from other administration officials talking about these negotiations have averred to, quite openly, to concessions from the Ukrainians that will have to be made, the minerals deal, the abandonment of their NATO ambitions, and other elements. | ||
So far, we have not heard any administration officials suggest a single concession that the Russians should be prepared to make. | ||
And so I wonder if you could assure us At a minimum, that this negotiation process will not be as one-sided as the Europeans seem to think it is, that in fact, President Putin will also be made to engage in some concessions to reach this deal. | ||
Well, I think the president knows how to make a deal better than anyone who has ever assumed the office of the American presidency. | ||
And in order to make a deal, you have to bring both sides to the table. | ||
And typically, when you make a good deal, both sides leave that table a little bit unhappy. | ||
I'm not going to outline the concessions that the president and his team are engaged in discussing. | ||
These are obviously ongoing negotiations, and it would be unwise of me to impede them from this podium. | ||
But the president has made significant improvements in ending this conflict. | ||
He is committed to seeing an end to the war. | ||
He wants to see the bloodshed and the killing stopped. | ||
He wants to stop seeing young men being killed and slaughtered. | ||
This has been going on for far too long. | ||
The president inherited this mess because of the incompetence of the previous administration, and he's committed to fixing it. | ||
I'm not going to get ahead of him on additional ones, but he is wholeheartedly committed to striking a peace deal in Russia and Ukraine, also in the Middle East. | ||
Thank you very much guys. | ||
Good to see you. | ||
We'll see you later. | ||
unidentified
|
Thank you. | |
Another absolute flamethrower from Caroline Levitt. | ||
Off the top, ladies and gentlemen, Caroline Levitt saying, yeah, let's see here. | ||
The White House Correspondents Association is not going to decide who gets to ask questions at the White House. | ||
It's going to be us because we run the White House. | ||
You have no legal right to control. | ||
Which outlets get into this room? | ||
That's huge news inside of the media industry. | ||
It's obviously going to ruffle an enormous amount of... | ||
So the White House Correspondents Association, it's not even... | ||
They wield so much power over that room, and everyone's all scared of them, right? | ||
And whoever gets in charge, oh, it's always some corporate media goon, some apparatchik for the deep state that stands there and decides which outlets and which reporters get access to the White House. | ||
And it's a horrible way to delegate access because, of course, the corporate media goons are always going to gatekeep and keep out independent creators that actually have real audiences. | ||
And they're going to sit there and they're going to say, you know, they're going to dole out ideologically purity, based on ideological purity. | ||
Who gets an opportunity to ask Trump a question? | ||
This is why every single press conference and every single time you have Donald Trump get a chance to be peppered with questions from the press, it's always this vicious, frothing-at-the-mouth, rabies-laden, anti-Trump degenerates. | ||
It's how you got the first term, where every single question was like, why are you a racist? | ||
Why do you beat your wife? | ||
Why do you hate America? | ||
Why are you a Russian agent? | ||
How do you think you get that? | ||
You get that because the White House Correspondents Association staffs every Republican presidency with a bunch of rabid lunatics, animals. | ||
So, like, this is an amazing thing. | ||
Carolyn Levitt saying the White House Association will no longer decide who gets to go into the briefings. | ||
This is freaking awesome. | ||
That's a huge, huge announcement. | ||
And then she went beast mode on Elon Musk and on Dan Bongino. | ||
Let's first listen to this announcement. | ||
As you all know, for decades, a group of D.C.-based journalists, the White House Correspondents Association, has long dictated which journalists get to ask questions of the President of the United States in these most intimate spaces. | ||
Not anymore. | ||
I am proud to announce that we are going to give the power back to the people who read your papers, who watch your television shows, and who listen to your radio stations. | ||
Moving forward, the White House press pool will be determined by the White House press team. | ||
Legacy outlets who have participated in the press pool for decades will still be allowed to join. | ||
Fear not. | ||
But we will also be offering the privilege to well-deserving outlets who have never been allowed to share in this awesome responsibility. | ||
Just like we added a new media seat in this briefing room, legacy media outlets who have been here for years will still participate in the pool. | ||
But new voices are going to be welcomed in as well. | ||
So, ladies and gentlemen, we are very, very excited about this. | ||
We had a series of meetings at the White House last week. | ||
And we met with the press team, we met with the comms team, we met with the digital team. | ||
And so expect us, yeah, to have a little bit of a presence at the White House in the coming days, weeks, months, and years. | ||
It's going to be very exciting. | ||
We do have operations in Washington, D.C., thanks to you. | ||
We're a scrappy little independent organization, but we have bigger streaming numbers than all of the corporate press. | ||
This is the streaming numbers for today. | ||
We can put them up here. | ||
This is a good example. | ||
Here's a perfect example. | ||
This is from our morning show. | ||
It's not us cherry-picking. | ||
This is just from our morning show. | ||
This is us streaming. | ||
This is the YouTube platform. | ||
This is us streaming on YouTube against pretty much an entire slate of corporate, publicly funded. | ||
Some of them are publicly funded. | ||
And then many of them are funded based on IPOs, stock market, publicly traded. | ||
So some of these outlets are actually funded from the government, and many of these outlets are funded, you know, obviously from massive corporate interests. | ||
These are billion-dollar companies that we're streaming up against. | ||
Billion-dollar companies. | ||
NBC News, Bloomberg, Fox, ABC News. | ||
Nothing but love for our boys at Newsmax, okay? | ||
We love you, my Newsmax. | ||
But... | ||
The numbers speak for themselves. | ||
Who has the audience? | ||
Who's actually determining audience? | ||
And we thank you for that, obviously. | ||
We're not sitting here trying to pat ourselves. | ||
We just thank you for this. | ||
So when the White House talks about giving the power back to the people, they're talking about a new ecosystem. | ||
Carolyn Levitt said, we're not going to treat the press like it's the same country as it was in 1925, as it ended in 2025. | ||
So 1925, people are like, oh, I can't wait to read Reuters or my local newspaper. | ||
But now your local newspaper doesn't have any readers. | ||
People are watching streaming shows. | ||
And so, like, let's give access to where people actually are. | ||
It's a freaking wonderful, wonderful thing to see. | ||
Carolyn Levitt, yeah, going in over the top, speaking of, like, independent creators, Dan Bongino is an independent creator. | ||
She's one of the granddaddies of this business. | ||
He's now going to be Deputy Director of the FBI. | ||
And Carolyn Levitt was asked about this. | ||
We predicted that this would be the fire from the day's press briefing. | ||
And here it is, ladies and gentlemen, Carolyn Levitt dropping the people's elbow on the reporter. | ||
Why would you hire Dan Bongino? | ||
He's a far-right extremist. | ||
We predicted this. | ||
Here we go. | ||
unidentified
|
On the FBI, the president also announced a new deputy director of the FBI, Dan Bongino. | |
From what has been reported, and maybe this is not accurate reporting, you can tell me, the FBI director, Kash Patel, informed Republican senators that it would be... | ||
An individual named as the deputy who was a special agent currently at the FBI, and of course Mr. Bongino is not. | ||
what was the reason for naming Mr. Bongino to this position? | ||
And was Mr. Patel not not correct in making that assurance to those senators. | ||
I'm not sure if anybody in this room has listened to Mr. Bongino when he talks about the past corruption at the FBI, when he talks about his experience serving for the United States Secret Service. | ||
This is a man who loves his country and who has honorably served our country in ways that many people have not. | ||
He understands the depth of the corruption at these institutions, which the American people reelected President Trump to shake up. | ||
And I think it's quite despicable to see many networks in this room who have had chyrons on their television screens labeling Mr. Bongino as a far-right podcaster. | ||
He is not. | ||
He is a former law enforcement agent. | ||
He is a former Secret Service agent who put his life on the line to protect this country. | ||
And that is why the President of the United States has entrusted him for this important role. | ||
He's also an outsider to this Washington swamp. | ||
And we often see that when outsiders are appointed to such coveted positions, a lot of people in this city get very, very nervous. | ||
And they should be because Dan Bongino and Kash Patel and Attorney General Bondi are focused on rooting out the corruption at these agencies and ending the weaponization of government once and for all. | ||
Oh, it makes our heart happy to see Dan treated with the respect that he deserves and to see him fought for by the administration. | ||
This is such a difference in the last administration when you can't run the same playbooks anymore. | ||
These people are not effing around. | ||
Let me tell you this. | ||
We met with the comms team. | ||
We met with the press team. | ||
We met with the digital team at the White House. | ||
unidentified
|
We took selfies. | |
We took photos. | ||
We brought you all with us. | ||
And then we went to Kash Patel's swearing in ceremony. | ||
These people are not effing around. | ||
Like there is a brand new white. | ||
unidentified
|
Thank you. | |
Oops, just a second. | ||
How we doing? | ||
Back? | ||
All right, ladies and gentlemen. | ||
Sometimes it happens. | ||
A glitch in the matrix. | ||
Especially when you're talking about the corporate media and the interests behind them. | ||
Yeah, you know what? | ||
It just so happens that the stream glitches. | ||
The point is that, yes, when you are doing independent media, when you are somebody who is making a change, when you're somebody who wants to change the system, what happened in term one is the media could ratchet up the pressure. | ||
And could get the administration to either fire that person or to create so much drama that they atrophy the relationship and it implodes. | ||
Now, this administration is coming forward like a bulldozer. | ||
And when they're going after Dan Bongino, when they come for Dan Bongino, and they're attacking him, it's seen as a signal that they're doing the right thing. | ||
And this is what I was heard at meeting after meeting after meeting, that the prevailing opinion and vibe of the admin is F you. | ||
Like, the American people, and that comes from the American people, okay? | ||
Not from anybody's internal bitterness, but from the American public that voted to put Donald Trump in charge, to break these systems, to destroy these systems, and that now there is the public will of the American people that knew Trump, saw Trump, want Trump, and want more of Trump. | ||
And so now they feel like they have the country at their back, and they have now, The sanctioning of the American public to go forth and to destroy these corrupt old systems, to rip them out, root and stem. | ||
And so it is an amazing moment, and that's why you're seeing sort of the reckless abandonment of old norms, like the destruction of the White House Correspondents Association, which is inconceivable for any administration over the last 30 years in my lifetime. | ||
But now they're just going out and just doing away with it. | ||
Because they feel like the American people have given them a mandate to do that. | ||
Final thing, speaking of mandates, Carolyn Levitt talking about the five tasks you got done. | ||
This is the email that Elon Musk sent out to all federal workers and how stupid it is that federal workers can't answer. | ||
This simple question. | ||
Here we go. | ||
First of all, let's just take a step back and talk about this idea. | ||
The president sent out a truth last weekend to Elon Musk saying he loves everything Elon is doing and he wants him to be even more aggressive because Doge thus far has proven incredibly successful in making our government more efficient. | ||
And so Elon and Doge came up with this idea. | ||
Elon has implemented this at his private companies. | ||
It has proven successful. | ||
And it's a very simple idea when you think about it. | ||
All this administration is asking, President Trump is asking, is for federal workers who live off of the American taxpayer's dime to send five bullet points of what they have done in the previous week. | ||
That is all we are asking for. | ||
And so the Office of Personnel and Management sent out additional guidance last night. | ||
Those responses should be directed to agency leadership. | ||
And the president defers to his cabinet secretaries who he's obviously entrusted to pursue the guidance relative to their specific workforce. | ||
And for some of the agencies that you've seen who have said, please don't send these emails. | ||
It's in their best interest for that specific agency. | ||
And the president supports that. | ||
And let me be very clear. | ||
The president and Elon is his entire Why is this so hard? | ||
Well, you know, there were two options, right? | ||
It's called the fork in the road for a reason. | ||
You could take eight months severance with all of your benefits and retire early or just go find a new job. | ||
Or you could sit here and complain, bitch, and get fired because you can't answer the simple question, what did you do? | ||
Name five things that you've done over the last week. | ||
Federal government is enraged over this, but all it is is a litmus test. | ||
It's a blot test, right? | ||
This is the easiest way to call the massive workforce. | ||
We did have some very specific meetings with people that are internal at Doge and people who are external also in the enforcement of this. | ||
And it's pretty remarkable. | ||
The issue is the scale. | ||
The federal government is the largest employer on earth and has 2.5 million employees. | ||
So how do you determine which ones are doing their jobs and how do you determine which ones aren't? | ||
You have to do these type of mass litmus tests that are determinants to whether you are worth something inside of the federal workforce, whether you have value to the public sector or private sector. | ||
And the first test is here. | ||
Here's a resignation letter. | ||
The people who took the resignation are clearly ones that believe that they have skills that can be used in the private sector. | ||
Of course I'll take the severance. | ||
Eight months of my pay, plus all my benefits. | ||
I'll just go find another job. | ||
The ones who are clinging desperately to their little government job are the ones who believe they have no actual value to the private sector. | ||
And therefore, no value to the public sector. | ||
And so one, that's one culling. | ||
And then the second culling is name five things you did. | ||
If you can't name five things you did, then you clearly are not using the American taxpayer dollars correctly. | ||
And so you need to go, right? | ||
You're not doing anything. | ||
It's like an easy way to find if you're doing something. | ||
We love this vibe. | ||
We love this new attitude from the White House. | ||
We heard it directly from the White House. | ||
It's awesome to see. | ||
We've been needing this for a very long time in this country. | ||
It's incredible to live in this timeline. | ||
It's amazing to do it together. | ||
We want to thank you. | ||
We don't put up graphics like this to brag. | ||
Just one more time. | ||
We don't put up graphics like this to brag. | ||
This is a show built by you, for you, for your voice, and this is what we view as our sacred charge. | ||
It's to ensure that the questions that you want and that you have get asked. | ||
That's why we're very excited. | ||
One of these days, I mean, you know, the White House has got a lot of things going on. | ||
We are going to get in that new media seat. | ||
We're going to ask questions. | ||
It's going to be real fun. | ||
We'll tell you all about it. | ||
We'll open it up and we'll let you ask the questions yourself. | ||
We will be your voice. | ||
And that's the difference in the landscape now. | ||
We are not the voice of special interests. | ||
We are not the voice of Pfizer or some massive corporation that paid us to say something. | ||
No! | ||
No! | ||
You won't see our names on any of the USAID stuff. | ||
You won't see our names on any of the campaign stuff, right? | ||
Oh, this campaign was paying Benny. | ||
Oh, that campaign was paying Benny. | ||
This governor, this senator. | ||
No! | ||
You will never see it, okay? | ||
You are the only people that we will ever answer to. | ||
And we're very deeply, deeply thankful for you, ladies and gentlemen. | ||
So, we look forward to this new... | ||
Thank you for giving us a voice in that, all of us together. | ||
We're going to change things, and we finally have a White House that's ready to rock and roll. | ||
Rock and roll with us by subscribing to our channel, by subscribing to our podcast page, and making sure, ladies and gentlemen, that we have the energy to unite together and to fight. | ||
And we're winning. | ||
It's amazing. | ||
How many news cycles have we created over the last couple of days, Alex? | ||
Just by asking the right questions, all right? | ||
So this is us winning. | ||
Shout out to the chat. | ||
Nothing but love. | ||
Okay, let's freaking go to work. | ||
It's your boy, Benny. | ||
See ya. | ||
unidentified
|
Hey, Piglet. | |
What day is today? | ||
Today is the day that we burn this mother f***er to the ground. | ||
My favorite day. | ||
My favorite day. | ||
The Benny Show's here bringing liberty to life. | ||
From the speeches to debates, Benny's sharp like a blade. | ||
Coming through the lies, watch the truth cascade. | ||
With the warrior's heart, this man never fades. | ||
You know it's primetime when Benny invades. | ||
From saving the nation to stories untold. | ||
The Benny Show's a storm, see the truth unfold. | ||
Stay in the loop, let freedom take hold. | ||
Salt on all the libs, soul never sold. | ||
It's the Benny Show, where the truth gon' be. | ||
Faith and freedom on your TV screen Stand up strong, battle through the night The Penny Show's here bringing liberty to light Liberty to light Bringing liberty to light Liberty to light Bringing liberty to light From the speeches to the debates, Benny's sharp like a blade. | ||
Coming through the lies, watch the truth cascade. | ||
With the warrior's heart, this man never fades. | ||
You know it's prime time when Benny invades. | ||
From saving the nation to stories untold. | ||
The Benny show's a storm, see the truth unfold. | ||
Stay in the loop, let freedom take hold. | ||
Salt in all the libs, soul never sold. | ||
It's the Benny show, where the truth gon' be. | ||
Faith and freedom on your TV screen. | ||
Stand up strong, battle through the night. | ||
The Benny show's here bringing... |