appeared to say the quiet part out loud as he admitted that he will be asking for “special favors.” On on Wednesday night, the conservative media pundit and staunch Donald Trump supporter celebrated latest picks for jobs in his second term including the controversial choices of for director of national intelligence and . Watters boasted of his ties to some of those headed for the most powerful jobs in government, with his former colleague Pete Hegseth tapped to become Trump’s future He then went on to suggest that he might seek to use those ties to his advantage.
“Trump’s picking stars he can trust to catch his back and enact his agenda. And they’re rolling them out fast and fun,” Watters said. “The country senses it’s on the precipice of massive change and we’re excited.
“And I’m not just saying that because I know the entire cabinet and that I’ll be asking for special favors.” With a brief pause, he added: “Probably inappropriate, but it doesn’t hurt to ask.” What special favors Watters was alluding to remains unclear.
“A new golden age isn’t just a slogan, it’s a promise. Trump’s victory and these cabinet picks are raising our expectations because we deserve to have our expectations raised,” Watters added. Just days earlier, Watters complained on his show that his Democrat-voting mom following Vice President Kamala Harris’s election loss to Trump.
“Since they [the Democrats] can’t stop us, we’re not invited to Thanksgiving,” he said on Monday’s episode of “People are taking some space in the Watters household. I’ll have you know that I wasn’t invited to my mother’s house for Thanksgiving. Apparently, there wasn’t enough room.
” He added: “She said it was a scheduling situation. And then at the last second invited me to come over on Black Friday. I told her, ‘No thanks, I’ll be at Best Buy.
’” Watters’s mother has been known to send her son critical text messages since 2017 in which she urged him to avoid “conspiracy rabbit holes.”.
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Fox News’s Jesse Watters says the quiet part out loud about Trump’s administration
Jesse Watters Primetime host boasted of his ties to some of those headed for the most powerful jobs in government