Megyn Kelly didn’t back down when the New York Times tried to corner her over old Trump drama. The fiery interview showed just how out of touch the media is with regular Americans. Kelly stood strong, turning the tables on a hostile reporter and defending President Trump’s record. Here’s how it went down.
Lulu Garcia-Navarro from the Times tried to grill Kelly about Trump’s past comments on women. But Kelly shut it down fast. She called the attacks “ancient history” and said voters care more about safety and freedom than old gossip. “I don’t give a * about Trump getting handsy 20 years ago,” Kelly fired back. She said real issues like border security and protecting women’s sports matter way more.
Kelly praised Trump’s wins, like stopping the border crisis and axing woke DEI policies. She credited him for slashing illegal crossings and keeping men out of girls’ sports. “He actually fixed problems,” she said, while the media obsesses over “fake scandals.” Navarro seemed rattled as Kelly flipped the script, highlighting Biden’s failures instead.
The Times clearly hoped to paint Trump as a villain. But Kelly wouldn’t play along. She called Trump a “fighter” who gets things done, even if he’s rough around the edges. She reminded viewers that Trump helped expose Roger Ailes’ corruption at Fox News, proving he’s no friend to predators. Kelly said Trump’s toughness is why he crushed the primaries in 2016—and why he’s still winning now.
Navarro tried to guilt Kelly over endorsing Trump, but Kelly didn’t budge. She said Trump earned her support by delivering on promises. “He closed the border. He protected my daughters,” she said. Kelly slammed the left for ignoring crimes by illegals while crying over Trump’s past. She called it hypocrisy, pointing to Laken Riley’s murder by a Biden-flown migrant.
The interview turned awkward when Navarro pushed sexual assault claims. Kelly shot back that she’s a harassment survivor herself—but facts matter. She dismissed E. Jean Carroll’s allegations as lies and praised Trump for giving women “a voice” against unfair policies. Navarro looked stunned as Kelly praised Trump’s leadership over “phony #MeToo theatrics.”
This clash proves the media hates Trump’s allies more than his policies. The Times thought they’d trap Kelly in a “gotcha” moment. Instead, she schooled them on what voters actually care about. Jobs, safety, and freedom beat woke talking points every time. Kelly’s takedown of the Times shows why conservatives trust influencers—not newspapers—for the truth.
In the end, Megyn Kelly proved Trump’s critics wrong. She showed strength, common sense, and loyalty to what works. While the media cries about the past, Kelly and Trump are focused on fixing the future. That’s why the left fears them—and why America needs them.