Bill Maher Says Trump Has Been Treated Like Any Other President. His Daughter-In-Law Disagrees

Comedian and HBO host Bill Maher attempted to claim that President Donald Trump has largely been treated like any other president — but Lara Trump, the president’s daughter-in-law, stopped him in his tracks.

Maher spoke with Trump — the wife of President Trump’s second son, Eric — on his “Club Random” podcast, and she made the point that her entire family had been put through the wringer over almost a decade. Maher pushed back, arguing that it was simply a part of being a public figure — and that it may have been more pronounced simply because he was the President of the United States — but Lara Trump thought otherwise.

WATCH:

🚨NEW: @LaraLeaTrump *ISN’T HAVING IT* when Bill Maher claims her family was treated just like other presidents’ families🚨

TRUMP: “Our family has been scrutinized, attacked under a microscope — I would probably argue more than any family.”

MAHER: “Well, of course — because… pic.twitter.com/GG7MCjjyoO

— Jason Cohen 🇺🇸 (@JasonJournoDC) November 24, 2025

“Our family has been scrutinized, attacked under a microscope — I would probably argue more than any family,” Trump began.

“Well, of course — because your father-in-law is the president,” Maher pushed back.

“It’s not just that he’s the president — it’s that he’s Donald Trump as the president,” Trump argued. “They’ve gone after all of us in such an aggressive way.”

“They would go after anybody,” Maher was not convinced. “They didn’t go after Obama and Clinton in an aggressive way?”

“Not like this, Bill,” Trump insisted.

Maher still made it clear that he wasn’t buying it: “Oh, please.”

“Really!? When did you see Obama and Clinton’s residences, personal private property, raided by the FBI?” Trump asked. “When did they have indictments against them to put them in jail for the rest of their life that everybody can agree were a little outrageous, Bill? Like, really!?”

Maher agreed that the raid on Mar-a-Lago was probably “over the top,” but went on to say that if he didn’t want his bathroom raided, Trump “probably shouldn’t be keeping files in [the] bathroom.”

Eric Trump faced a similar line of questioning in early November when “The Daily T” host Tim Stanley asked, “Some of the siege that you faced — and I understand why it was very personal and distressing — can you accept that some of it was just people legitimately disagreeing with your father’s policies and using every lever available, as people generally do in politics, in order to push back?”

The president’s son said that he certainly understood some attacks would come with public life, but argued it was “different than raiding somebody’s house. That’s different than subpoenaing their children with the intent to literally try and bankrupt a company,” he continued. “That’s different than calling every financial institution and telling them to debank a person. That’s different than making up dirty dossiers saying that there were golden you-know-whats happening with prostitution when it was totally fabricated and paid by the opposition.”

Duffy Says Dem State Is Breaking Law By Giving Driver’s Licenses To Illegals

Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy announced that the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration (FMCSA) has determined that Pennsylvania violated federal safety regulations by illegally issuing non-domiciled commercial driver’s licenses (CDLs), including to individuals who were not legally eligible to receive them.

FMCSA found that PennDOT failed to verify lawful presence and, in some cases, issued licenses that extended beyond the individual’s authorized stay in the United States. As a result, the Transportation Department is threatening to withhold nearly $75 million in federal funding unless Pennsylvania revokes all improperly issued CDLs and corrects the systemic failures that allowed the violations.

The findings emerged amid a nationwide audit of non-domiciled CDLs initiated in June, shortly after Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) arrested a suspected terrorist who had illegally entered the United States and received a Pennsylvania CDL earlier in the summer. Secretary Duffy cited this case as evidence of the national-security implications of lax CDL standards and criticized prior immigration policies for enabling such risks. He stated that the Department, under President Donald Trump, is committed to preventing unqualified foreign drivers from operating heavy commercial vehicles on American roads.

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USDOT has ordered Pennsylvania to take several immediate steps: pause all issuance or renewal of non-domiciled CDLs and commercial learner’s permits (CLPs); conduct a thorough audit to identify all noncompliant licenses and the procedural failures behind them; and revoke any unexpired, improperly issued licenses to ensure unqualified drivers are removed from service.

This enforcement action follows a broader series of transportation safety initiatives under the Trump administration. Earlier in the year, President Trump issued an executive order directing the Department of Transportation to strengthen roadway safety, with a particular emphasis on enforcing long-standing English-language proficiency requirements for commercial drivers. The order argues that English proficiency is essential for reading traffic signs, communicating with law enforcement and inspection officials, and performing basic safety and reporting functions. It instructs the FMCSA to rescind its 2016 guidance and implement updated inspection procedures, ensuring that non-English-proficient drivers are placed out of service.

The executive order also directs FMCSA to review irregularities in states’ issuance of non-domiciled CDLs and improve verification of domestic and international driving credentials.

In recent months, Secretary Duffy has introduced several related actions, including emergency restrictions on eligibility for non-domiciled CDLs, a nationwide audit exposing widespread non-compliance, a pro-trucker initiative to reduce regulatory burdens, and new guidelines mandating out-of-service orders for drivers who fail English-language requirements. These steps align with President Trump’s March order designating English as the official language of the United States.

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