Watch: White House Gives STUNNING Response Over Pardoning Hunter

After Hunter Biden was indicted by a Delaware Federal Court, White House Press Secretary Karine Jean Pierre had to discuss the possibility of President Joe Biden granting a pardon to his son.

During a White House press briefing Friday, a reporter asked Jean Pierre, “Will the president pardon or commute his son if he is convicted?”

The Press Secretary responded, “So I’ve answered this question before. It was asked of me not too long ago — a couple of weeks ago — and I was very clear, and I said no.”

The response this time wasn’t much different from her initial answer in July when the possibility of charges against Hunter Biden first arose during his court appearance. At that time, Jean-Pierre had simply stated that President Biden would not pardon his son.

Hunter Biden was recently indicted by Special Counsel David Weiss on three federal charges related to illegal firearm possession. These charges include making a false statement in the purchase of a firearm, making a false statement related to information required by a federal firearms dealer, and possession of a firearm by a person unlawfully using or addicted to a controlled substance, as reported by Fox News. If convicted, he could face a maximum of 25 years in Federal prison and fines of up to $750,000.

New York Post columnist Miranda Divine explained, “That mythology of Joe Biden that’s been around for more than four decades, which is that he’s a lovely family man… moderate Democrat, lunch pail Joe, working-class Joe, the poorest man in Congress, and a wonderful family man full of empathy because of the tragedies in his own life. That’s what he’s playing on,” Devine said.

“I think the end game is that he’s setting up… framing this sympathy card so that when it comes time, perhaps in his lame duck period, that he will pardon Hunter and Americans will forgive him because they will say, well, Hunter was a drug addict, and Joe just loves his family, and he’s been through enough tragedy in his life,” she continued. “Leave him alone.”

She guessed that Biden’s response to an interview question from MSNBC’s Stephanie Ruhle in which he said, “My son has done nothing wrong. I trust him. I have faith in him, and it impacts my presidency by making me feel proud of him,” was premeditated and an attempt to set up the prosecution of Hunter as a “political witch hunt.”

“It’s obviously rehearsed, and the plan for Joe Biden is to just remove himself entirely from the influence-peddling operation that he was involved in with his son Hunter and his brother Jim, pretend that it has nothing to do with him and that Hunter is just being persecuted in a political witch hunt,” she told Fox News.

“That’s probably the only way he can go, considering he’s lied about his involvement since before the 2020 election,” she said. “And it will work for him with those Americans, and there are still many of them who believe that Joe Biden, that his only sin is that he loves his son too much.”

MSNBC’s Jen Psaki, who served as Biden’s former Press Secretary, appeared to be making an effort to foster a sympathetic perspective on Friday. During an appearance on Morning Joe, she remarked, “I mean, first and foremost, the politics of this are a little hard to predict, but right now you have the president’s son, somebody he loves deeply, somebody who has very publicly struggled with drug addiction, now facing these charges,” as reported by The Hill.

While Devine’s theory and Psaki’s attempts may suggest a certain perspective, Biden’s apparent reluctance to discuss Hunter’s indictment in recent press interactions would appear to challenge this idea.

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