Fox Star Maria Bartiromo Sucks Up to Trump in Stunning New Video
The Fox Business Network anchor gushed about her private dinner with the president the night prior, praising Trump's 'very successful first 100 days in office' in a fawning segment on Mornings With Maria Thursday.
'The president could not have been more gracious and generous with his time,' she said.
During the intimate meal, Bartiromo was wined and dined with 'a bundle of bibb lettuce salad and petite filet of beef with baby kale, followed by strawberry shortake.'
She was joined by White House Communications Director Steven Cheung and later fawned about the event for her Mornings With Maria fans.
'I was incredibly honored to have dinner with President Trump and his key communications director, Steven Cheung, at the White House last night,' she wrote, adding that the trio discussed Trump securing the border and 'reining in inflation'—despite major stock market instability prompted by his chaotic tariff rollout.
The praise didn't end there.
'After an incredibly busy night meeting business leaders at the press conference and then in the Oval Office, the president was kind enough to dine with me,' she added.
Before the feast, she added, she was able to tour the president's home.
'I was so grateful to see some of the president's new designs at the White House and the changes, including that iconic portrait of President Trump with his fist in the air saying fight, fight, fight after being shot in the ear back on July 13 last year,' she said.
She ended her speech by expressing extreme gratitude: 'Thank you so much, President Trump, for your leadership, friendship, and protection of this great nation.'
Trump reposted the video of Bartiromo's high praise on his Truth Social account.
It's not the first time the MAGA lover has dined with Trump, and it's likely far from her last.
And Bartiromo isn't the only one that's been wooed by Trump's banquets.
Bill Maher recently came under fire for his cozy meal with the president. The comedian compared Trump to a king and later called himself a hero for even stopping by.
Like Bartiromo, he called the president 'gracious and measured.'
Maher received major backlash for his obsequiousness, including from actor Larry David, who wrote a scalding New York Times essay titled 'My Dinner With Adolf' to parody Maher's visit.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Buzz Feed
28 minutes ago
- Buzz Feed
Trump's Drug Price Claims Spark Disbelief Online
Donald Trump's math on cutting drug prices didn't add up. Again. The president this weekend repeated his promise to get pharma companies to lower the cost of medications for Americans, who often have to pay much more for certain drugs than people abroad. But the actual amount of the 'tremendous drop' in cost that Trump boasted about had critics scratching their heads. 'You know, we've cut drug prices by 1,200, 1,300, 1,400, 1,500%,' Trump said. CNN 'I don't mean 50%. I mean 14, 1,500%,' he added. CNN But as many on social media pointed out, that would mean all drugs are free and people actually get paid to receive them. Trump: You know, we've cut drug prices by 1200, 1300, 1400, 1,500%. I don't mean 50%. I mean 1400, 1,500% — Acyn (@Acyn) August 4, 2025 @Acyn / CNN / Via Also, drug prices haven't actually come down, despite Trump's pressure on pharmaceutical companies. Trump appeared to acknowledge that when he later said, 'We'll be dropping drug prices ... by 1,200, 1,300 and even 1,400% and 500% but not just 50% or 25%, which normally would be a lot because the rest of the world pays much less for the identical drug.' CNN Reality is 'eroding before our eyes,' said one critic. Others agreed. Tomorrow, it'll be eleventy thousand percent, and the media will report it without question, and we'll all shake our heads and move along, and it'll be just another day of reality eroding before our eyes. — Jennifer Erin Valent 🇺🇸🇺🇦 (@JenniferEValent) August 4, 2025 @JenniferEValent / CNN / Via Time and again, he's shown himself to be utterly innumerate. — George Conway 👊🇺🇸🔥 (@gtconway3d) August 4, 2025 @gtconway3d / CNN / Via Same guy currently claiming he fired the job numbers expert over bad statistics. — J.J. Abbott (@jjabbott) August 4, 2025 @jjabbott / CNN / Via It's great that we have a numerically illiterate person unilaterally in charge of our tariff policy. — Gregg Nunziata (@greggnunziata) August 4, 2025 @greggnunziata / CNN / Via Wharton (undergrad) called, and they would like their degree back. — Sedge Dienst🇺🇦 (@SedgeDienst) August 4, 2025 @SedgeDienst / CNN / Via 100% would mean all drugs are free. So this is @realDonaldTrump seriously claiming that drug companies are now paying US 14 times the price of our medications just to take them. Dumbest man on the fucking planet. — Andrew—#IAmTheResistance—Wortman (@AmoneyResists) August 4, 2025 @AmoneyResists / CNN / Via I think he MAY have failed first year stats. — Peter Baugh (@PWBaugh) August 4, 2025 @PWBaugh. CNN / Via Is it too much to ask for a president who knows how numbers work. — Michael Freeman (@michaelpfreeman) August 4, 2025 @michaelpfreeman / Via this was in the same discussion in which the president reiterated that he didn't trust the math of the Bureau of Labor and Statistics on the economy: — Edward-Isaac Dovere (@IsaacDovere) August 4, 2025 @IsaacDovere / Via There's a real temptation here to make a joke, or to ask which drugs these are that pharma companies are now paying patients to take, because let's all get in on it! But honestly, all I can feel is sad that someone this stupid could be our president. Again. — Dr. Michelle Au (@AuforGA) August 4, 2025 @AuforGA / Via He lies as he breathes. — Wajahat Ali (@WajahatAli) August 4, 2025 @WajahatAli / Via


The Hill
28 minutes ago
- The Hill
Watch live: Trump signs executive order on Olympics 2028 task force
President Trump is expected to sign an executive order on Tuesday afternoon to establish a task force ahead of the 2028 Olympic Games. The games will be held in Los Angeles, the first Olympics to be hosted in the U.S. since the 2002 Winter Games in Salt Lake City. Trump earlier this year signed another order to bar transgender athletes from competing in girls' and women's sports, fulfilling one of his campaign promises. Those individuals will also face exclusion from the 2028 Summer Olympics and Paralympics. 'The President considers it a great honor to oversee this global sporting spectacle in his second term,' White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt said in a statement. 'Sports is one of President Trump's greatest passions, and his athletic expertise, combined with his unmatched hospitality experience will make these Olympic events the most exciting and memorable in history.' The event is scheduled to begin at 4 p.m. EDT. Watch the live video above.


The Hill
28 minutes ago
- The Hill
The ‘Art of the Deal' author keeps getting out-negotiated by Putin and Xi
Fool me once, shame on you; fool me twice, shame on me. Fool me over and over? I might as well surrender. Back in the day, even before he took office for the first time in 2017, President-elect Trump sent a clear message to Communist China and the world that he was not one to be hindered by convention or well-established protocols that no longer made sense — at least to him. Thus, when he received a congratulatory telephone call from Taiwan's then-president Tsai Ing-wen, herself only in office for eight months, he accepted it routinely and graciously, like any of the other good wishes received from world leaders. He dismissed the cautions from his advisers that, ever since President Jimmy Carter broke off diplomatic relations in 1979 with the Republic of China (Taiwan's official name), high-ranking American officials simply do not have direct contact with Taiwanese counterparts. He brusquely told those with the raised eyebrows that he would speak with anyone he chose to. His refreshing message of defiance gave hope to Taiwanese and their supporters in the U.S. and around the world. The new sheriff in town, it seemed, would do a lot less diplomatic pussyfooting regarding Beijing's supposed sensitivities about all things Taiwan. For the next four years, Trump was supported in his more direct approach — toward both Taiwan and China — by a superb national security team of truth-telling China 'hawks.' These included Vice President Mike Pence, Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, successive National Security Advisors John Bolton and Robert O'Brien, their deputy Matt Pottinger, Assistant Secretary Randy Shriver, and a range of other mid-level foreign policy and national security officials who shared clear-eyed views about the manifold threats posed by the regime of the Chinese Communist Party. After his second election, the new incoming Trump administration did not announce a congratulatory phone call from Taiwan's new president, William Lai Ching-te — either because Lai had been advised by U.S. officials not to initiate one and thereby irritate China, or because (less likely) the call occurred but was not publicized. A less ambiguous explanation pertains to the Trump team's decision not to allow Lai to make a New York stopover during his planned trip to South America, now canceled by the embarrassed Taiwanese president. Trump's rejection of Lai's brief pass-though visit breaks several years of U.S. tradition, a favorite Trump practice. But this disruption, instead of advancing Taiwan's short-term advantage and America's long-term interest, represents a significant step backward in the U.S.-Taiwan relationship. It was clearly taken to set the stage for Trump-Xi trade talks and Trump's hoped-for visit to Beijing. There may be an even more sinister explanation for cancellation of Lai's travel. Purely conjectural at this point is the possibility that intelligence sources detected a Chinese threat against Lai and recommended a prudent cancellation of his travel, with public reports from both the U.S. and Taiwan sides providing a convenient cover story. Even the most innocent explanation of Lai's aborted stopover is an inauspicious indication of how Trump will calculate his balancing of U.S. interests between China and Taiwan. It may also reflect the role of Trump's undersecretary of policy at the Pentagon, Elbridge Colby, who long opposed the Biden administration's flow of arms to Ukraine as a diversion of resources Taiwan needs to deter or defend against Chinese aggression. At his confirmation hearing, Colby said that Taiwan is 'important' to U.S. interests, but 'not existential.' It is a new and cramped understanding of U.S. interests which depend heavily on the international perception of U.S. credibility and its incalculable value in reassuring allies and deterring adversaries. The danger of diminished credibility was demonstrated with Biden's disastrous abandonment of Afghanistan, which was followed within months by Vladimir Putin's invasion of Ukraine. The harm to America's reputation was only partially undone by Trump's dramatic strikes on Iran's nuclear facilities last month. But doubts about U.S. credibility remain because the Iran operation, while hardly a pinprick like so many prior military strikes, may have been a one-off, not to be repeated, and Iran defiantly continues restoring and advancing its nuclear program. The dangerous Taiwan analogue would be, for example, a Chinese seizure of Quemoy or some other Taiwanese island, or a Chinese blockade, followed by a largely symbolic U.S. military strike that fails to convince Beijing to back off. Washington's dilemma then would be whether to escalate the kinetics and risk derailing the trade talks and Trump's Beijing visit, or to accept the new status quo. It illustrates the increased leverage Trump has foolishly granted Xi and the erosion of diplomatic standing he has gratuitously inflicted on Taiwan. China has its own cards to play, of course, including withholding rare-earth minerals critically-needed by the U.S. defense industry. The U.S. cannot afford to buckle under those pressures without further eroding overall security credibility. Trump only recently acknowledged that he was frequently taken in by Putin's empty promises about ending the war in Ukraine — just as he strongly implied in 2019 that Xi had deceived him about the nature and origins of COVID. Yet, in both cases, he returned time and again to placing his trust in the dictators' words and relying on their nonexistent good faith. Worse, the converse of his credulity with America's authoritarian adversaries is reflected in his apparent contempt for our democratic friends and allies in Ukraine and Taiwan. While Trump's recent comments indicate he may have finally seen the light on Putin, his pursuit of a trade deal and quest for a China invitation suggest another double-win for China. China has managed to achieve these so-called win-wins during every U.S. presidential trip since Richard Nixon's. In exchange for allowing a Trump visit this time, Beijing will extract added U.S. concessions during the trade talks–beyond, e.g., Trump's 'flexibility on Tik-Tok, at the same time it benefits from U.S. deference to China on Taiwan. To borrow Trump's assessment of most of his predecessors, this is the way to Make America 'Stupid' Again. The only way Trump can restore America's lost credibility and deter a tragic miscalculation by China is to declare clearly and publicly that he will commit all the military force necessary to defend Taiwan. Joseph A. Bosco served as China country director in the office of the secretary of defense,2005-2006. He is a member of the advisory board of the Vandenberg Coalition and the Global Taiwan Institute.