The White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre on Monday said President Joe Biden would not have pardoned his son, Hunter, had Kamala Harris won the 2024 election — before immediately walking back her statement.
Asked abroad Air Force One whether the president would have made that decision had Harris won the election, Jean-Pierre said: “I’m not gonna, I’m not gonna get into, into the election. It is a no–I can answer that, it’s a no, and what I can say—.”
A reporter cut the press secretary off: “It’s a no? This would not have happened if Harris hadn’t lost the election? A pardon would not have happened if Harris hadn’t lost the election?”
Jean-Pierre responded: ”I can speak to where we are today, and so I can’t speak to hypotheticals here. Where we are today, the president made this decision over the weekend. He thought about it, he wrestled with it.” She reiterated Biden made the decision because he believed his son was being targeted for political reasons.
Jean-Pierre largely declined to add anything new to the pardon announcement, repeatedly referring reporters to the original statement announcing the move on Monday.
More on Hunter Biden pardon: Asked directly whether the White House lied to the American people with their repeated assurances that Biden would not use the presidential power to pardon his son, Jean-Pierre responded: “First of all, one of the things that the president always believes is to be truthful to the American people.”
Jean-Pierre added as she, Biden and reporters traveled to Africa on Monday: “And I would encourage everyone to read in full the president’s statement. I think he lays out his thought process.”
She declined to say whether the elder and younger Biden discussed a pardon this weekend. She said Biden “wrestled” with the decision, “and what he saw was that his son was being singled out.”
Remember: Jean-Pierre originally told reporters on November 7 — the day after the election — that Biden had no plans to pardon his son, but CNN earlier reported that White House aides senses the possibility of a pardon becoming more distinct since Trump’s victory last month.
CNN’s Kayla Tausche contributed reporting to this post.