On the one-year anniversary of his father’s withdrawal from the presidential race, Hunter Biden emerged from the shadows of well-deserved obscurity with all the subtlety of a fireworks show in a library. In the course of a three-hour, profanity-laced interview with podcaster Andrew Callaghan, Hunter spewed verbal venom at anyone who dared question his father’s legacy or who encouraged the elder Biden’s exit from the race.
Hunter took direct aim at actor and political activist George Clooney, who had penned an op-ed titled “I Love Joe Biden. But We Need a New Nominee” in The New York Times, calling for Biden to keep his initial one-term promise in view of his evident cognitive decline. Clooney, Hunter declared, was not even a real actor—just a “brand” with a nice house at Lake Como and a suspiciously close friendship with Barack Obama.
But Hunter didn’t stop with Clooney. No. No. No. He went full scorched-earth on the Democratic commentariat—James Carville, David Axelrod, Jake Tapper, Nancy Pelosi, and even President Obama. According to Hunter, these figures were nothing more than has-beens: washed-up strategists and junior speechwriters dining out on their Obama-era relevance like it was a never-ending buffet.
Hunter launched into an unbridled and largely mendacious defense of his father—casting him as more super than the heroes in the latest Superman movie. He called his father the “greatest president in his lifetime.” And of course, according to Hunter, there were no cognitive issues. Old Joe’s debate performance? Sleep medications. Sleep medications? Keeping Joe awake might be the more pressing challenge.
Hunter even defended his father’s immigration policies, which contributed to the greatest immigration crisis in American history. That’s when he went completely tone-deaf. “Who do you think washes your dishes?” he asked. It carried the same sort of racially insensitive undertone his father occasionally exhibited—like when Joe Biden called Obama a “clean Black” or told Black voters they weren’t Black if they voted for Trump.
In defending his father, Hunter channeled his old man. He had that finger-pointing Irish anger, an exaggerated sense of reality—particularly when it came to articulating accomplishments—and a tendency toward tone-deafness. Traits that Joe Biden has carried throughout his career.
Let us be clear: this wasn’t a press tour. It was a catharsis session disguised as a media interview. Hunter wasn’t trying to win hearts and minds—he was trying to settle scores, rewrite narratives, and maybe, just maybe, remind the world that he’s still here—as troubled as ever.
The irony? For all his rage, Hunter may have inadvertently accomplished what no Democratic strategist could. He unified the Democratic Party—if only in collective bewilderment. Democrats cringed. Republicans cheered. And the rest grabbed popcorn and watched the spectacle unfold like a political reality show with no commercial breaks.
In the end, Hunter’s return wasn’t about policy, legacy, or redemption. It was about loyalty—to his father and to his version of the truth. Hunter was the proverbial loudest voice in the room, not trying to persuade—just demanding to be heard. It was less of a measured rebuttal and more of a verbal demolition derby.
But some saw the interview as a way to burnish Hunter’s tattered reputation. CNN’s Michael Smerconish and his guest, Tara Setmayer, of the Seneca Project and Republican apostate, praised Hunter for his candor – seeing the interview as an act of rehabilitation. According to them, he showed a grasp of the issues. Hunter’s profanity was dismissed as a ‘who doesn’t”. His past was dismissed as old news.
Like Callaghan, Smerconish brushed off Hunter’s crooked and depraved past – recent past, in fact. If it were not for the pardon, Hunter could have been conducting the interview from a jail cell. Others also have joined the Hunter Rehabilitation Movement. Some see him as a potential presidential candidate. That says less about Hunter’s qualifications and more about those of the Democrat bench of presidential wannabes.
Is this the last of Hunter Biden—the accidental comedian, the ineffective firebrand, and the man who turned a political anniversary into a masterclass in unfiltered, irrational rage? We can only hope.
Maybe it was just his way of expressing gratitude for his father’s (or the autopen’s) pardon.
So, there ’tis.
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Author: Larry Horist
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