(Luis Cornelio, Headline USA) Amid yet another incident involving President Joe Biden’s dog, Commander, assaulting another Secret Service agent, Fox News host Kayleigh McEnany offered a sharp-witted response, marking the 11th known assault by Biden dogs.
“Sweetheart deal for Hunter. Sweetheart deal for Commander,” McEnany quipped on Wednesday’s edition of Outnumbered, humorously alluding to Secret Service officials’ recent admission of the latest incident that occurred on the White House grounds on Monday.
President Biden’s dog #Commander is biting people again at the White House. Harris starts with a touch of snark and then some common sense about a dog that keeps attacking Secret Service Agents. @kayleighmcenany @HARRISFAULKNER pic.twitter.com/OiHDEYosKi
— Outnumbered (@OutnumberedFNC) September 27, 2023
McEnany’s response followed remarks by co-host Emily Compagno, who blasted the White House for apparently allowing the German Shepherd run rampant.
“This is such a travesty,” Compagno said. “Rules for you, not for thee. If your dog bites someone, he is euthanized or put on notice and the second bite he is euthanized.”
She went on to express her concern, saying, “Nine bites in two months, 10 in three and now we have the 11th and he’s simply a bad dog? This again illustrates how this family is immune from any kind of accountability.”
Co-host Harris Faulkner joined the discussion, referencing the infamous cocaine incident at the White House. “They had coke in the house; he had been to the lobby area, acting out of himself,” she jokingly observed.
“This is on the owner of the dog,” Faulkner continued. “I wonder what is going on in that family, they don’t get that dog some help.”
Fox News first revealed the 11th incident, but the Commander’s relentless assault against White House officials came to light after numerous Freedom of Information Act lawsuits from conservative legal group Judicial Watch.
Specifically, the group found records of the 10 previous attacks by Commander on officers and agents of the U.S. Secret Service between October 2022 and January 2023. In several of these cases, the agents required medical care, including hospitalization.
Tom Fitton, the founder of Judicial Watch, expressed his concerns in statements to Fox. “These shocking records raise fundamental questions about President Biden and the Secret Service,” Fitton remarked. “This is a special sort of craziness and corruption where a president would allow his dog to repeatedly attack and bite Secret Service and White House personnel.”
Fitton added, “And rather than protect its agents, the Secret Service tried to illegally hide documents about the abuse of its agents and officers by the Biden family.”