Skip to content
Search AI Powered

Latest Stories

Kaitlan Collins Hits Don Jr. With Mic Drop Reminder After He Blames Media For Calling Trump 'Hitler'

Kaitlan Collins and Donald Trump Jr.
CNN

After Donald Trump Jr. tried to blame the media for calling his father "literally Hitler," CNN's Kaitlan Collins had a brutal reminder for him about JD Vance.

After Donald Trump Jr. tried to blame the media for exacerbating threats against his father, former President Donald Trump, by calling him "literally Hitler," CNN anchor Kaitlan Collins gave him a brutal reminder about something Trump's own running mate J.D. Vance himself had said.

Speaking to Collins in the spin room after Vance's debate with Vice President Kamala Harris's running mate Tim Walz, Trump Jr. said that the media is responsible for the heightened political tensions nationwide, implying that news reporters have stoked an environment that resulted in two failed attempts on his father's life.


He suggested these hostilities have been inflamed because the media has platformed critics who have compared his father to Adolf Hitler, the genocidal German Nazi Party leader responsible for the Holocaust and the deaths of more than 6 million Jews and other dissidents.

He said:

"This environment wasn't just created by Donald Trump."

To that, Collins responded:

"Everyone wants your dad to be safe. Nobody wants the threats against his life but you can't blame the media for those threats. There's no evidence that [the media] drove those."

Trump Jr. countered:

"[The media] allows people to have a platform to call someone literally Hitler every day for nine years, it creates it. Whether you want to believe it or not, that's a fact."

Then Collins gave him a crucial reminder:

"Did you know that J.D. Vance once likened your father to Hitler as well. He once questioned if he is 'America's Hitler.'"

You can watch the exchange in the video below.

Collins was drawing attention to Vance's previous identity as a "Never Trumper" who once described Trump as "America's Hitler" and "cultural heroin" unable to regard the needs of the working class.

In 2016, Vance frequently criticized Trump in interviews tied to his bestselling memoir, Hillbilly Elegy, which had positioned him as a notable voice on rural America and Trump’s ascent in politics. He argued that the then-Republican presidential nominee offered empty promises that wouldn’t address the problems plaguing communities like his hometown in Ohio.

Additionally, he referred to Trump as an “idiot” in tweets that have since been deleted. During an August 2016 NPR interview, he mentioned that he might consider voting for Democratic nominee Hillary Clinton if he believed Trump had a chance of winning.

Prior to his Senate campaign, Vance apologized for previously calling Trump “reprehensible," telling CNN in 2021 that "I regret being wrong about the guy" while declaring that Trump was a good president.

Trump himself is a sucker for flattery and Vance's prior remarks appeared not to bother him when he and Vance appeared on Fox News for a joint interview during which he shared the real reason he picked Vance as his running mate:

“We’ve always had a good chemistry. And originally, JD was probably not for me but he didn’t know me. And then, when we got to know each other, he liked me, maybe more than anybody liked me. And he would stick up for me and he’d fight for the worker as much as I fight for the worker.”
“We just had an automatic chemistry."

People appreciated the fact-check and were also quick to mock Trump Jr.'s hypocrisy given his support for Vance.



CBS vice presidential debate moderator Margaret Brennan did question Vance about his prior remarks comparing Trump to Hitler, to which Vance claimed he has "always been open and sometimes, of course, I’ve disagreed with the president, but I’ve also been extremely open about the fact that I was wrong about Donald Trump.”

Nor did he mention that he once told a radio host that he doesn't believe Trump "actually cares about folks" or that he once said in a separate interview with the University of Chicago Institute of Politics that "some people who voted for Trump were racist and they voted for him for racist reasons."

And Vance certainly did not mention that he once liked tweets accusing Trump of committing "serial sexual assault," called him "one of the USA’s most hated, villainous, douchey celebs," and harshly criticized Trump’s response to the deadly 2017 white nationalist rally in Charlottesville, Virginia.

It's clear Trump and his son have a lot of explaining to do.

More from News/2024-election

Linda McMahon; Mrs. Puff from "Spongebob Squarepants"
Taylor Hill/WireImage; Nickelodeon

Department Of Education's Bizarre 'SpongeBob' Tweet For Teacher Appreciation Week Backfires Spectacularly

The Department of Education (DOE) was criticized after tweeting a strange image of Mrs. Puff from SpongeBob SquarePants to mark Teacher Appreciation Week, drawing outrage online.

The agency wrote, “Teachers are dedicated,” alongside an image of Mrs. Puff, the boating school instructor from SpongeBob SquarePants best known for repeatedly trying—and failing—to help SpongeBob pass his driving exam, depicted reading a book titled “MAGA.”

Keep ReadingShow less
hantavirus illustration
Joao Luiz Bulcao/Hans Lucas/AFP via Getty Images

Infectious Diseases Expert Speaks Out After MAGA Makes Predictably Unfounded Claim About Hantavirus

For those unaware, ivermectin is an FDA-approved antiparasitic medication used to treat conditions caused by parasitic worms as well as external parasites like lice.

Parasites are organisms that depend on a host to both survive and spread. There are three main types of parasites that call humans home—the endoparasites protozoa and helminths (worms), which cause infection inside the body, and ectoparasites, which cause infection superficially within or on the skin.

Keep ReadingShow less
Hayden Panettiere
Dimitrios Kambouris/Getty Images

Hayden Panettiere Just Publicly Came Out As Bisexual—And She Explained Why She Waited So Long

Scream and Heroes star Hayden Panettiere is soon releasing her memoir This is Me: A Reckoning, and according to an interview with US Weekly, she almost didn't write it.

Despite many of her characters being confident, kind, and often bubbly in nature, Panettiere's life at home was riddled with dark moments, including tremendous public pressure, abuse, drug addiction, and tragic loss.

Keep ReadingShow less
Brian Niccol
Eugene Gologursky/Getty Images for Fast Company

The CEO Of Starbucks Just Gave A Mind-Numbing Defense For Charging $9 For Coffee 'Experience'—And People Aren't Having It

What's the absolute most you'd ever agree to pay for a coffee? If you said the absurd amount of $9, you're apparently Starbucks' ideal customer.

The coffee chain's CEO Brian Niccol is getting dragged on the internet for insisting that $9 is a perfectly reasonable price for a cup of joe.

Keep ReadingShow less
Zohran Mamdani
Michael M. Santiago/Getty Images

Zohran Mamdani Praised For His Post About Fashion Industry's Unsung Heroes After Skipping Met Gala

Each year, the Costume Institute of the Metropolitan Museum of Art—dubbed just The Met—hosts an invite-only fundraising gala in New York City, currently boasting a $100,000-a-ticket price tag.

The Met Gala has been called "fashion’s biggest night" with icons of fashion and entertainment rubbing elbows with the uber-wealthy in The Met's Fifth Avenue location on Manhattan's Upper East Side. This year's theme was "Fashion is Art."

Keep ReadingShow less