Originally published at The Federalist.
by Newt Gingrich and Ben Domenech : Opinion
USA – -(Ammoland.com)- The media elite gathered at a much-diminished White House Correspondents’ Dinner this last week. The dinner grew to feature a glitzy parade of celebrities under President Obama, and has also become an increasingly controversial event. This is in large part due to the entertainment.
Over the past decade, comedians Stephen Colbert, Seth Meyers, and Larry Wilmore have all delivered highly politicized remarks, with Meyers’ comments having the added distinction of directly targeting Donald Trump, who happened to be in the room at the time.
This week’s dinner will be a shell of itself given the absence of the commander in chief for the first time in 36 years. But it will also be marked by the absence of many who abhor the overly politicized nature of the event and expect more of the same partisan insults from this year’s comedian, Hasan Minhaj.
There are a host of talented comedians working today, including Dave Chappelle, Bill Burr, and John Mulaney, who, while their politics does not match up with President Trump’s, are perfectly capable of entertaining without becoming stridently partisan.
Mr. Minhaj, unfortunately, is not in that category. He is a relatively unknown comedian – for good reason.
His whole shtick is blatantly partisan and left-wing. Minhaj is perhaps best known for his segments on The Daily Show in which he referred to then-candidate Trump as “White ISIS,” claimed Trump and the overwhelming majority of Republicans are racist, and argued that conservatives should be banned from the White House.
Given that the President of the United States declined the invitation to this year’s dinner, you might think that the event’s organizers would extend an olive branch to invite him to at least attend next year’s event. White House Correspondent Association President Jeff Mason said on Morning Joe on April 11 2017, that he wasn’t looking for someone who would “roast the president in absentia.” Yet, he picked someone who does just that for a living.
Mr. Minhaj has also already proven that his approach to events like these is to grandstand and lecture. Last year, in remarks to the Washington Radio and TV Correspondents Dinner, he performed an extremely partisan monologue that devolved into a full-blown left-wing critique of Congress. The mood in the room, which was comprised of people predisposed to agree with his political attacks, was awkward and uncomfortable. More than one member of the audience walked out. Mr. Minhaj even mocked those who express “thoughts and prayers” toward the victims of terrorism and crime, and claimed everyone in the room was responsible for the 2016 terrorist attack at a nightclub in Orlando.
The “punchline” of his remarks was a long-winded rant demanding gun control.
He falsely asserted that Congress has effectively been bought by the National Rifle Association to the tune of $3.7 million over the past decade, and suggested that everyone in the room head to Kickstarter to raise $4 million to buy the Congress back.
Even by the low standards of someone who plays a fake journalist on TV, this attempt at fact-checking was completely botched. His dollar figure was in error, but it was a revealing error: Mr. Minhaj apparently conflated donations with the fact that the NRA has 3.7 million members (itself an outdated datapoint, as they have far more today). The NRA’s political activity and strength is not because of the dollars it spends, but because it represents far more American voters than Mr. Minhaj recognizes.
This is the problem of an era in which group-think blinds us to the way the world really is. To the left, there must always be some nefarious reason the laws are the way they are. It can never be acknowledged that the people are represented, and complex issues are worked out through our political system. At its worst, this is a view that delegitimizes the American system of government because the results are not to the liking of the left.
If it is to exist, the White House Correspondents’ Dinner should be an event that is one of rare comity (and real comedy) between the press and the politicians they cover. It ought to lower the levels of acrimony and the toxic partisanship that have prevented many members of the media elite from being able to cover the Trump administration fairly. If the dinner has any function, it ought to be a reminder of a degree of mutual respect for the leadership of the nation, the importance of a free press, and the value of the comic fool who makes us laugh at one another and ourselves. As G.K. Chesterton wrote, “Only man can be absurd: for only man can be dignified.”
Freedom of speech is one of the most important freedoms we have, and this includes the freedom to offend. The freedom to speak your mind and skewer the authorities that surround us, to blaspheme, to insult, to level a cutting jab at the most powerful, is inseparable from the individual freedoms that animate the American people. Mr. Minhaj is free to make use of these important rights. But there is no requirement that we listen to his unfunny insults. This is one of the reasons we, like the president, did not attend. And for those supposedly objective members of the media elite who did, the American people will noticed who applauds.
Your Friend,
Newt
P.S. Autographed copies of Callista’s new children’s book, Hail to the Chief, and my new political thriller, Treason are now available
About Newt Gingrich
Newt Gingrich is well-known as the architect of the “Contract with America” that led the Republican Party to victory in 1994 by capturing the majority in the U.S. House of Representatives for the first time in forty years. After he was elected Speaker, he disrupted the status quo by moving power out of Washington and back to the American people.
Gingrich Productions is a performance and production company featuring the work of Newt Gingrich and Callista Gingrich. Visit : http://www.gingrichproductions.com/
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