Jeanine Pirro is the latest loyalist to join Fox News to the Trump administration pipeline | Trump administration

When Donald Trump launched a series of harsh attacks on Fox News after his 2020 election known as Joe Biden, it seems that one of the most enduring relationships in politics may be over.

Now, in 2025, it is clear that the relationship between the Right-wing News Channel and President Mercurial is stronger than ever. Trump has hired nearly twenty Fox News hosts - recently Jeanine Pirro - to create a government full of TV characters who can spit out his message and acquiesce about everything he needs.

The number of former Fox News figures appointed by interim officials in Colombia has been employed to the age of 23. Pirro, for example, troubled Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth and troubled transportation secretary Sean Duffy, transport secretary and Michael Waltz, Michael Waltz, Michael Waltz, Nickel Waltz, a national security adviser at a distance, have given Ward a prudent victory over a longer range.

Trump praised Pirro for announcing her viewing characters for the U.S. attorney, which may believe she shares his spirit because like her Fox News alumni, she has been distributing for years. Like Hegseth, her new role is not attributed to recent rich relevant experience, but rather Trump himself – essentially guaranteeing obedience to a president known to demand.

“It is ridiculous to name Fox News host Jeanine Pirro as interim attorney,” Mike Nellis, a Democratic strategist and former former senior adviser to Kamala Harris, wrote on X, with many people on the left.

"Trump has no interest in keeping any of us safe, in Heggs. Loyalty to abilities - never interested."

Fox News-Trump Administration Road also talks about the enduring power of the network owned by Rupert Murdoch – despite repeated conflicts with the network, Trump has recruited from his employees.

Fox News made the president angry when Trump summoned Arizona’s swing state in the days after the 2020 election before and during his first term. The Rift is a great extent: Trump began urging his supporters to watch U.S. News and News, while Fox News' ratings briefly dropped.

Protesters gathered Tuesday at the Headquarters of Fox News’ parent company News Corp. in Midtown Manhattan. Photo: Melissa Bender/Nurphoto/Shutterstock

Since then, bonds have recovered, even if there is an occasional Trump outbreak, just like his recent polls calling for Fox News to be fired, which has actually become the end school for right-wing figures before they take office in government positions.

Hegseth's inappropriateness, who was Fox and Friends' weekend host, said to have been awful - two veteran charities, the three million military and civilian employees who led the Department of Defense quickly became obvious. The leak of Hegseth's involvement in March's signal chat message brought censorship, and it seems that despite Hegseth's mean behavior, Trump may have lost some confidence: Appeared last week, the White House will take unusual steps to stop Hegseth from choosing Hegseth as the chief of staff and installing his own candidate.

Legal commentator Tristan Snell responded after Trump announced the appointment of Pirro.

In Pirro, Trump is not only going to win a great TV performer. He is getting a loyal soldier who seems unlikely to question him and may make his request. Pirro, a one-time district attorney whose legal career actually ended 20 years ago, showed that before she did anything Trump wanted.

Trump noted that Pirro announced his appointment when she was a district attorney in Westchester, New York, and then added: "In addition to her legal career, Jeanine has previously hosted her own Fox News show Justice Jeanine for a decade and is currently co-host of the five, one of the highest rated shows on TV."

Prosecutors spend a lot of time on highly rated TV shows that seem irrelevant (it's one of the most popular TV shows Cable News The show is not all TV), but it makes sense through Trump's lens. Pirro has done a great job in acting rage and may not have effortlessly hosted the highly picky press conference Trump prefers.

"When Fox reshapes itself as a Trump network, Pirro became one of the president's most famous Jazz teams," wrote Matt Gertz, a senior researcher at the watchdogs organization America for America, wrote on MSNBC.

"Her personal dedication to the president is impossible to imitate - she once described Trump as "a light-speed version of the uninterrupted, never-hidden, driverless man."

Pirro's time at Fox News has caused a lot of controversy. In a lawsuit in the Dominion voting system, she cites Trump’s lawsuit on the outcome of the 2020 election. Documents published in the legal struggle reveal documents about how Piro is viewed internally. The executive producer’s verdict on Pirro’s proposed Fox news monologue is that it is “a prevalence of conspiracy theories and BS, and this is another example of why this woman should never be on live TV.” The same producer described Piro as a "reckless madman."

Now, she will be in charge of the country’s largest U.S. Attorney’s Office, overseeing 330 assistant attorneys and more than 330 support staff, often in roles held by people with recent experience.

Her tenure will be closely watched given that Pirro's support for Trump and her past defense of the 2021 rebellion seems unshakable.

“She expressed deep distrust of professionals, praised the January 6th thug as a patriot and made it clear that she would use the office to protect Trump rather than to improve the interests of justice,” Liz Dye, host of the Law and Chaos Podcast, wrote in a public notice.

“There is no indication that she will run the U.S. Attorney’s Office in Washington, D.C. in a professional way.”