During the Biden administration, arguing against the influence of foreign money on the White House was a defining principle for right-wing media. At the time, their arguments were based in fantasy, but now — as the Trump family’s corruption is both much more straightforward than the supposed Biden pseudoscandals and involves sums of money that are larger by orders of magnitude — the silence of right-wing media hosts is deafening.
Take one recent example: A Wall Street Journal investigation recently revealed an apparent quid pro quo in which a Trump family company received a half-billion dollar investment from an Emirati prince days before the president took office. Then the Trump administration funneled AI chips to the prince’s firm.
In 2023, then-Fox News host Pete Hegseth said, “We have a president of the United States who was potentially involved in all of those entanglements with foreign entities,” adding “which could lead to complications or compromise as the president now.” Hegseth is no longer a Fox News host; he’s now Trump’s defense secretary.
It wasn’t just Hegseth. Current Trump-appointed U.S. Attorney Jeanine Pirro railed against alleged Biden family corruption when she was a Fox host. Likewise Leo Terrell, who was a Fox contributor then and is now a top Justice Department official. When she was a frequent guest on Fox instead of being attorney general, Pam Bondi argued that the foreign business dealings of the president’s son were “a matter of national security.”
The feverish claims of a “Biden Crime Family” involved a total of less than $7.5 million paid to Biden family members over the years — and nothing to Joe Biden. In contrast Trump has already “used the office of the presidency to make at least $1.4 billion,” the editorial board of The New York Times reported on the anniversary of his second inauguration. The Fox personalities who joined the Trump administration are obviously hypocrites, but the levels of alleged corruption between these two administrations are in completely different solar systems.
If you would like to read more about this, I invite you to check out Matt Gertz’s piece which goes into much more detail.