'Uneducated jackal': Prosecutor Connie Pillich Facebook post about Trump gets backlash
In a now-deleted post on her personal Facebook page, Hamilton County Prosecutor Connie Pillich said she will attend an upcoming anti-Trump protest and referred to the president as 'an incompetent, childish, selfish, uneducated jackal.'
Pillich, the first Democrat to be elected prosecutor in the county in nearly a century, made the post sometime on Tuesday, June 10. It was still visible the evening of June 11. She had deleted it by early the following day.
Pillich began by responding to a Facebook prompt that users see.
'What's on my mind? My job is to prosecute people who commit crimes,' Pillich wrote. 'But all this is against a backdrop of such unconstitutional lawlessness at the federal level by an incompetent, childish, selfish, uneducated jackal who threatens our very democracy every day.
'Even worse, he is backed up by vile humans whose acts and advice indicate they want to destroy our democracy.'
The post shared an event listing for one of the 'No Kings' protests scheduled for June 14, which are taking place nationwide. "Please join me Saturday," she wrote above a link to the University of Cincinnati protest.
A spokeswoman for Pillich did not respond to a request for comment.
Many, particularly supporters of President Donald Trump, responded with outrage or worse, devolving into name-calling.
The Hamilton County Republican Party's Facebook page said Pillich's statement labeling Trump supporters as 'vile' disparaged the millions of fellow Ohioans who voted for him.
'This kind of rhetoric is not only divisive – it is dangerous,' the Republican party's post said. 'It undermines the foundation of democracy: respect for the will of the people, even when we disagree. And when it comes from someone in a position of public trust – especially a prosecutor sworn to uphold the law impartially – it raises serious ethical concerns.'
Other users accused Pillich of not being impartial and even being driven by hatred.
'Are you publicly admitting that you'll shirk your responsibilities as a prosecutor to push a political agenda?' conservative radio personality and podcaster Jack Windsor wrote on Facebook. "To say your constituents should be disappointed is an understatement − they deserve better."
University of Cincinnati professor David Niven, who studies American politics and follows local politics, said he believes Pillich was "sinking to the level of her political opponents."
"Prosecutors are supposed to be above politics" and have a duty "to stand up for the rule of law," Niven said. "Pillich could stand up for every vulnerable resident of Hamilton County in carrying out her duties. But naming calling does not advance that agenda. While it is no doubt satisfying to speak frankly, Pillich would be better off acting on these observations than making them."
(This story was updated to add a video and a photo gallery.)
This article originally appeared on Cincinnati Enquirer: Prosecutor Connie Pillich Facebook post slamming Trump gets backlash
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Bloomberg
15 minutes ago
- Bloomberg
Netherlands Defence Minister: NATO-wide 5% defence spend would be "historic"
Ruben Brekelmans, Netherlands Minister of Defence said they and their European partners support President Donald Trump's calls to encourage Iran to the negotiation table in order to "come to a sustainable solution". Speaking about the upcoming NATO meeting, he told Bloomberg's Oliver Crook "if we agree to 5% spending on core defence and defence-related matters, that would be a historic step" and said it would be of particular significance "if 32 allies in unity agree on this". (Source: Bloomberg)


Fox News
17 minutes ago
- Fox News
Ted Cruz: Biden's foreign policy 'accelerated' Iran's nuclear program
All times eastern FOX News Radio Live Channel Coverage WATCH LIVE: Trump to huddle with top brass after hammering Iran's nuclear sites


The Hill
17 minutes ago
- The Hill
Leavitt: ‘High degree of confidence' strikes hit Iran's stored enriched uranium
White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt said Monday the Trump administration has a 'high degree of confidence' that its strikes against Iran hit locations where enriched uranium was being stored amid questions about whether officials in Tehran had relocated the nation's stockpile. 'We are confident, yes, that Iran's nuclear sites were completely and totally obliterated, as the president said in his address to the nation on Saturday night,' Leavitt said on ABC. 'And we have a high degree of confidence that where those strikes took place is where Iran's enriched uranium was stored,' she added. 'The president wouldn't have launched the strikes if we weren't confident in that. So this operation was a resounding success.' The U.S. on Saturday struck three Iranian nuclear facilities: Fordow, Natanz, and Esfahan. President Trump described them in an address to the nation as 'completely and totally obliterated,' something he reiterated in a social media post late Sunday. But experts have acknowledged it would take time to determine the extent of the damage from U.S. strikes, and some reports raising the possibility that Iran moved some of its enriched uranium away from those sites ahead of the attack. 'Final battle damage will take some time, but initial battle damage assessments indicate that all three sites sustained extremely severe damage and destruction,' Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Gen. Dan Caine said Sunday. The New York Times reported that there was evidence Iran had moved equipment and uranium from the Fordow site in recent days, citing two Israeli officials. The Times also cited text messages from the head of the International Atomic Energy Agency indicating Iran had moved its uranium stockpile. Trump administration officials have maintained that the purpose of the strikes was to decimate Iran's nuclear program and severely curtail Tehran's ability to develop a nuclear weapon. 'We're not at war with Iran. We're at war with Iran's nuclear program,' Vice President Vance said Sunday on NBC News's 'Meet the Press.'