Lady, please do your book tour and then shut the f*ck up! Please, Carville vented. Carville may have been referring to the point in The New Yorker interview where Jean-Pierre said you have to think about how I'm thinking about this as a Black woman who is part of the LGBTQ community, and living in this time where I also don't Democrats right now, Democrats' leadership, is protecting vulnerable people in the way it should.
Jordan, during MSNBC's The Weekend: Primetime on Saturday night, asked Jean-Pierre if she regretted going after Special Counsel Robert Hur, after his 2024 report called into question Biden's cognitive ability and memory. Biden's mental decline, Jordan said, was obvious to Americans who watched his debate with President Donald Trump in June 2024 so why would Jean-Pierre, at the time, call Hur's report gratuitous and one that did not live in reality, Jordan wanted to know.
In Independent, out Tuesday from Legacy Lit, the former White House press secretary offers a candid, unsparing view of what she calls a "five-alarm fire" threatening American democracy. Through a blend of memoir and political analysis, Jean-Pierre chronicles how she rose inside government, why she left the Democratic Party, and what she believes must change if the country is to survive the authoritarian turn ushered in by President Donald Trump's return to power.
Heinrich expressed skepticism about Jean-Pierre's use of 'Broken' in her book title, implying it contradicted her previous claims during her time as press secretary.