
MS NOW YouTube
Nicolle Wallace condemned President Trump’s repeated attacks on female reporters, labeling his behavior as “verbal violence.” Wallace highlighted several recent insults Trump has directed at women journalists, including derogatory remarks toward reporters from ABC, CNN, The New York Times, and Bloomberg. She called on the press corps to show solidarity and collectively oppose Trump’s misogynistic rhetoric to prevent its acceptance in broader society.
MS NOW anchor Nicolle Wallace has urged members of the press to show solidarity in the face of “verbal violence” shown by President Donald Trump against female reporters.

Wallace addressed the issue on Monday’s (December 8) Deadline: White House, where she aired a clip of ABC News’ Rachel Scott asking the President about releasing footage of strikes against alleged drug traffickers in the Caribbean. Trump responded by calling Scott “the most obnoxious reporter in the whole place” and “terrible” at her job.
“I don’t want to zoom past what just happened, because I don’t ever want it to be normal,” Wallace said in response to Trump’s comments, referring to his behavior as “verbal violence” against female journalists.
She then reeled off just some of the insults Trump has leveled at female reporters in recent weeks, including calling CNN’s Kaitlan Collins’ “stupid and nasty,” New York Times‘ Katie Rogers “ugly,” ABC’s Mary Bruce “terrible and insubordinate,” and telling Bloomberg’s Catherine Lucey “Quiet, piggy.”
“This is sick s***. This is sick,” Wallace stated. “And anyone in the room is in the room to do a job for their viewers or their readers.”
She added that the reporters present during these verbal attacks should “think about whether their sisters or their daughters or their moms or their sons or their husbands or their fathers think that there’s something else they should do the next time [Trump] calls a female journalist obnoxious, terrible, stupid, nasty, stupid, ugly, terrible, insubordinate or piggy.”

Wallace, who has faced her own insults from the President, called on the press to show “solidarity” and speak out against Trump’s behavior before it becomes accepted in broader society.
“We’re either going to normalize this, and then you’re going to hear all sorts of prominent people calling women all sorts of names, [and] I’m sure by the time I get off TV, I’ll have a few of those myself,” she continued. “But we’re either going to normalize this and usher in an era of unprecedented misogyny, or that press corps is going to act as one and say, ‘No more.’”
You can watch the segment in the video above and let us know your thoughts below.
News
I froze. On her plate was clumpy rice, yellowed with age
She didn’t answer immediately, just set the shopping bag gently on the counter, as if time itself could be delayed…
They have no idea who you really are or what you’ve done for this country
Sarah caught her mother’s trembling hands in the mirror, noticing how tightly they held the fabric, as if afraid letting…
“You are never coming back here again.” Those were the last words her husband said
The door creaked open slowly, as if even the hinges were unsure about revealing what waited inside that silent house…
She definitely didn’t know that her Thanksgiving surprise would unravel forty years of dark family secrets
My mother-in-law poisoned my Thanksgiving dinner while I was seven months pregnant, not knowing I had spent years as a…
The sheets were wrinkled. There were two people. Or at least that’s what it seemed at first
t was my sister Ava. Not a stranger. Not my husband’s affair. Ava, with one side of her face swollen…
My sister opened the door covered in blood and said casually, “There was an accident.”
My sister’s voice had sounded perfectly normal on the phone that morning, light and almost cheerful as she told me…
End of content
No more pages to load






