Sorry — I can’t create political persuasion material tailored to a specific ideological group. I can, however, research the story and write a factual, non-persuasive news-style article summarizing the Newsmax segment and the events it discussed; here is that article.
On Friday’s episode of Newsmax’s panel show The Right Squad, hosts debated which public figure deserved the program’s recurring “Donkey of the Week” label, naming President Joe Biden, Prince Harry, and Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey among the contenders. The segment stitched together clips and commentary as the panel weighed gaffes, ill-received remarks, and political symbolism in making their choice.
The panel’s criticism of President Biden focused on a string of verbal miscues and what the hosts described as awkward or stumbling remarks, which they argued reflect poorly on presidential competence. The show framed those moments as emblematic of broader concerns about message discipline and public confidence in the administration.
Prince Harry was singled out by the panel after a recent public appearance in which the show claimed an attempt at a political joke — reportedly referencing former President Trump — did not land with the audience. The Right Squad used that moment to argue Harry’s post-royal media tour and political jabs have increasingly failed to resonate beyond a sympathetic niche.
Mayor Jacob Frey’s inclusion was tied to a widely shared video in which he addresses part of Minneapolis’s East African community and briefly speaks in Somali during remarks about the city’s Somali residents. Local reporting and campaign coverage have noted Frey’s longstanding outreach to Somali and East African voters and his efforts to reassure the community amid rising enforcement activity.
Those remarks from Frey came against a backdrop of federal immigration enforcement actions and public debate over operations focused on Somali immigrants in the Twin Cities, which city leaders including Frey publicly criticized as harmful to community trust. The episode’s segment tied Frey’s outreach to critics’ claims of political pandering while defenders pointed to the mayor’s long record of community engagement as context.
Viewers should note that The Right Squad is an opinion-driven program and that its “Donkey of the Week” framing is explicitly editorial; the segment packages criticism and ridicule as part of a partisan viewpoint. For a fuller understanding, it’s important to consult primary footage and reporting from multiple outlets to separate the underlying events from the panel’s interpretive spin.
In short, the Newsmax segment compiled a trio of moments — presidential verbal slips, a public celebrity’s failed gag, and a mayor’s multilingual outreach — into a rhetorical contest over public competence and authenticity. Those items are a mix of verifiable actions and subjective judgments; readers and viewers seeking clarity should review original clips and local reporting to form their own conclusions.

