Newsmax’s panel on The Right Squad served up a fittingly brutal Friday night takedown, pitting President Joe Biden and Prince Harry against one another for that dubious honor they call “Donkey of the Week.” The segment cherry-picked moments meant to show a president who seems out of touch and a celebrity royal who’s more cuckoo for celebrity than grounded in any real service — the kind of stories hardworking Americans deserve to have called out.
The Biden portion was predictably merciless: the panel replayed clips and hammered home the sense that this administration has lost the confidence of the country it claims to love, even as Biden utters grand phrases about the “soul” of the nation. Conservatives are right to note the contradiction — when your commander-in-chief can’t command simple clarity about America’s future, people who pay the bills and keep the country running lose faith fast.
Then there’s Prince Harry, the embarrassingly entitled exile who keeps trying to cash in his royal trauma into comic relief and political snipes. His latest joke about former President Trump landed with a thud on late-night TV, proving that Hollywood applause and late-night liberalism can’t hide how out-of-touch he really is with ordinary Americans’ values and struggles. The spectacle of a British royal lecturing Americans while stumbling for laughs is exactly the kind of tone-deaf celebrity moralizing Conservatives love to skewer.
And let’s not forget Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey, who drew fire after addressing a large Somali community in Somali — a stunt critics called pandering at a time when city residents want elected leaders to speak plainly about crime, fraud, and accountability. Voters have a right to expect mayors to prioritize taxpayers and safety over performative gestures that inflame, not solve, real problems in their neighborhoods. Minneapolis deserves leaders who stand up for all citizens, not who chase identity points on a stage.
At the end of the day, the Right Squad’s rundown made the choice easy: Joe Biden takes home this week’s prize for the broader pattern of stumble, confusion, and the steady unraveling of respect for the office. While Prince Harry and Jacob Frey deserve their own share of scorn for self-importance and pandering, it’s the man in the Oval Office whose failures matter most — because when America falters, it’s the hardworking folks in flyover country who pay the price.



