WATCH: Retiring Republican Congressman Unloads On President Trump In Blistering Interview With CNN

President Donald Trump speaks during a joint press conference with Britain's Prime Minister Keir Starmer at Chequers near Aylesbury, England, Thursday, Sept. 18, 2025. (AP Photo/Evan Vucci)

Rep. Don Bacon (R-Neb.), who is retiring at the end of his term, delivered some of the most pointed criticism of President Donald Trump to come from within Republican ranks in a wide-ranging interview aired Sunday on CNN’s Inside Politics.

Pressed by host Manu Raju about Trump’s escalating fights with the press — including threats to strip ABC of its broadcast license following late-night host Jimmy Kimmel’s joke about conservative activist Charlie Kirk — Bacon did not hold back.

“The president doing threats against media is also wrong,” Bacon said. “We don’t threaten the media. … To threaten media and say you’re going to pull their license, that’s not what America’s about. And we do have a freedom of speech, freedom of the press. And we should defend that.”

Bacon added that while Kimmel’s joke was in poor taste, “to threaten media” over it went far beyond acceptable criticism.

Turning to the aftermath of Kirk’s assassination, Bacon rebuked Trump’s rhetoric, accusing him of painting the violence as a problem solely linked to the left.

“It’s not very unifying,” Bacon said. “I don’t think it’s accurate, for one. And it’s not unifying.”

When asked if Trump should tone down his rhetoric, Bacon said: “Absolutely. He centers on anger and opposition. … He had a chance to be more Ronald Reagan and try to unify both sides on this.

The Nebraska Republican reserved some of his harshest words for Trump’s handling of Russia, drawing a sharp contrast with former President Ronald Reagan.

“I think it would be bad,” Bacon said when asked how Reagan would view Trump’s dealings with Vladimir Putin. “Reagan stood up to Gorbachev. I don’t see the moral clarity right now out of the White House. … The president sends out such mixed messages on NATO and totally immoral, ambiguous messages about Ukraine and Russia … it’s probably the thing that bothers me the most.”

When pressed on whether Trump has the moral character expected of a president, Bacon hesitated.

“If you want to be a leader, people got to trust you, and they got to know your word’s your bond,” he said. But when Raju asked directly if Trump possesses that character, Bacon dodged: “Yeah… I think I’ll skirt around that.”

(YWN World Headquarters – NYC)

3 Responses

  1. I seriously question if the founders would advocate celebrating the murder of someone with a different political view. The vitriol and violence is coming from the “tolerant” Left. All of it.

  2. comparing trump to reagan is almost funny – reagan was m.i.a. throughout most of his presidency, and stuck to reading the teleprompter. kinda like biden and the autopen, except in a republican. bacon seems to prefer his presidents to be controllable, and trump certainly isn’t.

  3. Trump is on increasingly thin ice. His policies are seriously hurting farmers by closing down foreign markets (who in retaliation for our tariff policy are switching their purchase of farm products elsewhere). Serious labor shortages are developing in several industries due to his immigration policies, and the loss of tax paying and consuming immigrants appears to be weakening aggregate demand and leading towards a recession. His tariffs appear to be costing American jobs and are being inflationary. His use of lawfare alienates many Republicans who voted for Trump because they were annoyed by Democratic lawfare directed at Trump. His unwillingness to confront Putin or Xi scare traditional Republicans who remember how well the first “America First” movement led to failure to oppose Hitler and friends at a time where an active American foreign policy might have prevented war (and the holocaust). If Trump doesn’t start “winning” (as he says), MAGA is in big trouble.

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