Watch KJP Struggle with English During Friendly MSNBC Interview

March 12th, 2023 6:18 PM

On Friday night, President Biden’s thoroughly unqualified diversity hire press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre appeared on MSNBC’s All In with Chris Hayes for a wide-ranging interview. While to any competent Democrat press secretary, this would be an easy interview to get through, but as she has proven before, that is not the case with Jean-Pierre who even on her best day is seemingly incapable of putting a coherent sentence together. 

Due to recent reports that have been circulating in the press that the Biden administration is considering a return to the Trump-era migrant detention policies, Hayes simply asked for a confirmation of whether these reports have any merit. 

The result was a meandering, incoherent response that barely sounded like English: "So, what I want to be very clear here and I've answered this question, as you know Chris many times in the briefing room, and we as a administration has as well." 

 

 

Jean-Pierre then mumbled how she’s “not gonna certainly comment on rumors or conversations that are out there that people are reporting on.”

The following gibberish speaks for itself. No matter how unintelligible it is, we promise this is a word-for-word transcript of what she spit out:

We're gonna move forward with a, with a, with this kind of systems, immigration system, that has been gutted, really truly gutted by the last administration. We're gonna move forward and do it in a humane way. We're gonna do it in a safe way. And we're gonna do it in the way that moves us forward. And so what we have been seeing, what we have been dealing with, again, is trying to fix the damage that the last administration do--did. What we have done is we have opened the path to, we have opened the path to make sure that people have a way to get, to come through and to do it in a legal pathway. 

As I noted on Twitter, it was a complete word salad. The entire time she was speaking you could see Hayes sit there holding his breath while he painfully watched Jean-Pierre struggle to speak English. 

You have to wonder if this somehow is a second language for her. She is in way over her head and should never have been hired for this job. If the Biden regime wasn’t so obsessed with diversity, she wouldn’t be the Press Secretary. 

This segment was made possible by Chase. Their information is linked.

To read the transcript click “expand”:

MSNBC’s All In
3/12/2023
8:35:46 p.m. Eastern

CHRIS HAYES: I want to ask you, just since I have you here, about something we've covered earlier this week. There was reports that the White House was considering, or the Department Homeland Security was considering reintroducing the practice of family detention, something that was tried and then abandoned under Barack Obama in 2014, 2015 that was harshly criticized by then-presidential candidate Joe Biden, it has been roundly criticized by human rights lawyers, medical officials who have to deal with this as inhumane, as causing damage to children who are, you know, held with their families. Is it true that that’s being considered? 

KARINE JEAN-PIERRE: So, what I want to be very clear here and I've answered this question, as you know Chris many times in the briefing room, and we as a administration has as well. Look there---we are not gonna certainly comment on rumors or conversations that are out there that people are reporting on. Those are rumors. What we are going to promise is that we're going to do this. 

We're gonna move forward with a, with a, with this kind of systems, immigration system, that has been gutted, really truly gutted by the last administration. We're gonna move forward and do it in a humane way. We're gonna do it in a safe way. And we're gonna do it in the way that moves us forward. And so what we have been seeing, what we have been dealing with, again, is trying to fix the damage that the last administration do--did. What we have done is we have opened the path to, we have opened the path to make sure that people have a way to get, to come through and to do it in a legal pathway. 

That's why we extended the parole program, that has been very successful with Nicaragua, with Cuba, with Haiti, with Venezuela, and those are the things that the President wants to move forward with. How do we do this in a safe way, in a orderly way, in a humane way? And that's the tools that the President's going to use. But again, when it comes to rumored conversation, I just can't comment on that. It is not something that I can confirm. But I can tell you what we have been doing since the President walked into the administration.