International News Opinons Politics

Trump Scolds CNN’s Jim Acosta in India: ‘You Ought To Be Ashamed Of Yourself’

President Trump scolded CNN White House correspondent Jim Acosta on Tuesday during a press conference in India, telling the reporter he should be “ashamed” and blasting the liberal network.

Acosta asked Trump if he would accept foreign interference in the upcoming election and how he could justify replacing Joseph Maguire as acting director of national intelligence.

The president didn’t appreciate the two-part question.


“First of all, I want no help from any country, and I haven’t been given help from any country,” Trump answered before referencing a report that CNN had to walk back on Sunday. “If you see what CNN, your wonderful network said, I guess they apologized in a way. Didn’t they apologize for the fact that they said certain things that weren’t true? Tell me, what was their apology yesterday? What did they say?”

Acosta fired back, “Mr. President, I think our record on delivering the truth is a lot better than yours sometimes.”

Trump responded by attacking the credibility of Acosta and CNN.


Watch: Trump’s Joke Cracks Up Knesset but Horrifies Dems After Israeli Security Forced to Crush Leftist Disrupters
Johnson turns up volume on Democrats in shutdown standoff, telling them to ‘bring it’
California officials address growing conspiracy theories tied to Proposition 50 ballots
Judge sides with Comey after DOJ sought to limit his discovery access
Alec and Stephen Baldwin Involved in Head-on Car Crash
Defiant Letitia James rallies with far-left ally Mamdani after indictment, vows to keep fighting Trump
Nation’s only two 2025 races for governor rocked with three weeks until Election Day
Suspect in arson attack at Pennsylvania governor’s mansion pleads guilty
Hamas Carries Out Wave of Public Executions in Bid to ‘Reestablish its Rule’ in Gaza
Charlie Kirk’s colleagues and pastors praise his patriotism as Trump readies highest civilian honor
The Truth About the So-Called Homan ‘Bribe’ Shows Just How Much Damage Biden Did to FBI
Democratic socialist group backing Mamdani condemns Gaza ceasefire, calls for more anti-Israel resistance
Harvard University’s feud with Trump affecting students, research, and reputation: adjunct professor
Maine Gov. Janet Mills launches Senate challenge to Susan Collins, giving Democrats a prized recruit
Kamala Harris commends ‘the President’ in Middle East statement, but omits Trump’s name

See also  First of seven hostages freed and transported to Israel 

“Your record is so bad that you ought to be ashamed of yourself. You have probably the worst record in the history of broadcasting,” Trump said as Acosta attempted to interrupt.

“Your record is so bad that you ought to be ashamed of yourself. You have probably the worst record in the history of broadcasting.”

— President Trump

“As far as Maguire is concerned, he’s a terrific guy but on March 11 his time ended anyway… his time came up, so we would have had to, by statute, we would have had to change him anyway,” Trump said.

The combative Acosta then asked if the acting director of national intelligence will have experience in the field.

“Yes, we’re talking to five different people right now. I think all people that you’d know, all people that you respect and I’ll make a decision probably over the next week to two weeks,” Trump said. “We have some very good people.”

Acosta then asked if Maguire was “forced out because he wasn’t sufficiently loyal” to the president.

“No, not at all,” Trump answered.


Watch: Trump’s Joke Cracks Up Knesset but Horrifies Dems After Israeli Security Forced to Crush Leftist Disrupters
Johnson turns up volume on Democrats in shutdown standoff, telling them to ‘bring it’
California officials address growing conspiracy theories tied to Proposition 50 ballots
Judge sides with Comey after DOJ sought to limit his discovery access
Alec and Stephen Baldwin Involved in Head-on Car Crash
Defiant Letitia James rallies with far-left ally Mamdani after indictment, vows to keep fighting Trump
Nation’s only two 2025 races for governor rocked with three weeks until Election Day
Suspect in arson attack at Pennsylvania governor’s mansion pleads guilty
Hamas Carries Out Wave of Public Executions in Bid to ‘Reestablish its Rule’ in Gaza
Charlie Kirk’s colleagues and pastors praise his patriotism as Trump readies highest civilian honor
The Truth About the So-Called Homan ‘Bribe’ Shows Just How Much Damage Biden Did to FBI
Democratic socialist group backing Mamdani condemns Gaza ceasefire, calls for more anti-Israel resistance
Harvard University’s feud with Trump affecting students, research, and reputation: adjunct professor
Maine Gov. Janet Mills launches Senate challenge to Susan Collins, giving Democrats a prized recruit
Kamala Harris commends ‘the President’ in Middle East statement, but omits Trump’s name

See also  GOP seeks communications records between ex-DOJ staff and Jack Smith

Acosta quickly became a trending topic on social media after the argumentative exchange, with many criticizing the reporter’s behavior:


Watch: Trump’s Joke Cracks Up Knesset but Horrifies Dems After Israeli Security Forced to Crush Leftist Disrupters
Johnson turns up volume on Democrats in shutdown standoff, telling them to ‘bring it’
California officials address growing conspiracy theories tied to Proposition 50 ballots
Judge sides with Comey after DOJ sought to limit his discovery access
Alec and Stephen Baldwin Involved in Head-on Car Crash
Defiant Letitia James rallies with far-left ally Mamdani after indictment, vows to keep fighting Trump
Nation’s only two 2025 races for governor rocked with three weeks until Election Day
Suspect in arson attack at Pennsylvania governor’s mansion pleads guilty
Hamas Carries Out Wave of Public Executions in Bid to ‘Reestablish its Rule’ in Gaza
Charlie Kirk’s colleagues and pastors praise his patriotism as Trump readies highest civilian honor
The Truth About the So-Called Homan ‘Bribe’ Shows Just How Much Damage Biden Did to FBI
Democratic socialist group backing Mamdani condemns Gaza ceasefire, calls for more anti-Israel resistance
Harvard University’s feud with Trump affecting students, research, and reputation: adjunct professor
Maine Gov. Janet Mills launches Senate challenge to Susan Collins, giving Democrats a prized recruit
Kamala Harris commends ‘the President’ in Middle East statement, but omits Trump’s name

See also  New Jersey county ordered to fix ‘unlawful ballot design’ that favored Democrats

Trump and Acosta have sparred on a regular basis over the past four years. The CNN reporter emerged as a hero among progressives early in Trump administration. He also made a habit of shouting questions and feuding with former press secretaries Sean Spicer and Sarah Sanders.

Acosta’s star has fizzled as the White House has reduced the number of press briefings in favor of gaggles and interviews, limiting Acosta’s opportunity to draw attention to himself.

The CNN reporter was briefly banned from the White House back in 2018 after engaging in a contentious back-and-forth with Trump during a press conference, in which he seemed to refuse to pass the microphone to a female White House aide.

Acosta’s press pass was eventually restored after CNN argued that keeping him out of the White House violated the network and Acosta’s First and Fifth Amendment rights.

Acosta’s 2019 book, “The Enemy of the People: A Dangerous Time to Tell the Truth in America,” was billed as “an explosive, first-hand account of the dangers [Acosta] faces reporting on the current White House while fighting on the front lines in President Trump’s war on truth” as “public enemy number one.”

Story cited here.

Share this article:
Share on Facebook
Facebook
Tweet about this on Twitter
Twitter