White House claims Trump’s ‘pigg
As the murmurs died down, Leavitt leaned into the microphone with practiced calm,
recasting the insult as a kind of brutal honesty that Americans had supposedly signed up for.
She argued that Trump’s words, however harsh, were evidence of a leader who refused to hide behind polished talking points.
By framing the clash as a showdown between unvarnished truth and a supposedly thin-skinned press,
she sidestepped any acknowledgment of the underlying disrespect in the phrase itself.
The result was a briefing that clarified nothing and hardened everything.
Trump’s critics saw confirmation of an administration that treats cruelty as candor, while his supporters heard validation that their champion would never bow to media outrage.
Catherine Lucey, who had merely pressed on the Epstein files, suddenly found herself recast as a symbol in a larger culture war.
In the end, Leavitt’s spin didn’t defuse the moment; it cemented it as yet another dividing line in an already fractured political landscape.