Sean Hannity and the panel on his Fox News show were triggered into a right-wing hissy fit Monday night after a comedian joked about a political issue in a way that offended them. Before you laugh that off as just another example of the right ratcheting up the outrage machine, keep in mind we are in a new place in America, a place where the GOP is doing more than complain about words they don’t approve of and are are enacting laws to “cancel” those who dare speak or write them.
The GOP is doing more than complain about words they don’t approve of but are are enacting laws to “cancel” those who dare speak or write them.
In this instance, Hannity and a panel that included former President Donald Trump’s daughter-in-law Lara Trump and former Florida Attorney General and Trump impeachment lawyer Pam Bondi said they were disgusted by comedian Laurie Kilmartin’s abortion joke on Ayman Mohyeldin’s MSNBC show Saturday night.
Referring to the person who leaked the draft of a Supreme Court opinion overturning Roe v. Wade, Kilmartin, an Emmy-nominated comedy writer, said, “I would like to find out who the leaker is, so I could make sweet love to that person, because that person is a hero to me. Ok? And if the leaker — a lot of people are saying it could be a conservative — if the leaker is a Republican, and if I get pregnant during our lovemaking, I will joyfully abort our fetus, and let them know.”
That was too much for Hannity and his panel. The host somehow connected Kilmartin’s joke with pro-choice protesters allegedly committing acts of violence. Lara Trump shrieked, “That comedian was not funny … there’s nothing funny about the abortion issue” and added, “Shame on that woman.”
But Florida’s former attorney general took it further and said that because Kilmartin had joked about God in her past comedy performance, she “shouldn’t have been on TV.”
After that panel, Kilmartin had to lock her Twitter account after a tsunami of vile comments and threats of violence. Given the anti-abortion movement’s long history of violence, including bombings and murder, threats against Kilmartin are deeply worrisome.
People can criticize a comedian’s jokes. But Hannity’s panel was part of the right’s ongoing effort to silence, that is, “cancel,” comedy they don’t like. They had to have known that attacking Kilmartin on such an emotional issue would lead to a backlash against her by Fox News viewers.
The right’s war on comedy isn’t new. During the final days of the 2016 presidential campaign, Donald Trump called for “Saturday Night Live” to be canceled for jokes and sketches that mocked him. And as president, Trump not only lashed out against late night comedians, he even called on the Federal Communications Commission to investigate SNL for its jokes at his expense. Think about that: Trump tried to use the government to silence a comedy show.









