Hull Democratic Town Committee
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07/18/2026
07/17/2026
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NBC bumped Trump's big election speech for a Tom Hanks nature documentary. ABC ran a game show. CNN wouldn't put it on TV at all. The White House called them "cowards." The fact-checkers spent the night proving them right.
Here's what happened. Trump spent the week hyping "really big news" about elections, demanding a 9 p.m. primetime slot Thursday. NBC and ABC declined to interrupt their broadcasts, NBC airing The Americas with Tom Hanks and ABC sticking with Press Your Luck, parking the speech on streaming apps that reach a fraction of their audiences.
CNN said it would monitor the address "as a news event," feed on the website, fact-checks to follow. Even CBS split the difference with an anchored report.
Not partisan reflex, either. These same networks declined a Biden democracy speech in 2022, and they carried Trump's Iran address live this spring. They'd simply read this script before, and they made the call knowing Trump's FCC has spent the year threatening broadcasters' licenses.
Because here's what the country didn't miss. Twenty-five minutes in the East Room, five "areas of concern," and a headline claim that China pulled off "the largest compromise of election data in history" by acquiring 220 million voter files.
Then his own White House posted the supporting documents, and they tell a different story.
The "heist" involved voter data that is publicly available for download from commercial websites.
Senator Mark Warner said it plainly: "You don't have to hack into them. You can buy them." Campaigns and data companies buy those files every single day.
The scary Venezuela voting-machine document describes a hypothetical flaw in a machine used in Venezuela, not America. And the government's own cybersecurity agency called 2020 "the most secure in American history."
The real point arrived at the end: pass the SAVE America Act, the voting-restriction bill he refused to sign his own party's housing law over. Critics warn its photo ID and citizenship-paperwork rules would shrink the electorate by millions.
Chuck Schumer answered within minutes: "Not now. Not ever." Dead on arrival.
Hakeem Jeffries called him "a feeble, unhinged conspiracy-peddling 80-year old failed President."
And the tell that the snub landed? Trump spent part of his own speech complaining about the networks that weren't airing it. He noticed. It stung.
So why any of it, the primetime demand, the recycled 2020 fantasy, the desperate push for the bill? Jon Ossoff called the play in advance: Trump is "afraid to lose the midterms." Polling has Democrats favored to take the House in November. Thursday night was a man rehearsing his excuse four months early.
The rehearsal bombed.
Meanwhile, over on ABC, Press Your Luck contestants spent his time slot shouting "no Whammies."
America finally dodged one.
The man got 25 minutes ranting at the cameras in an empty room. The country got Tom Hanks.
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