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Jaxson Dart, Donald Trump, and the NFL’s Glaring Double Standard on Political Speech

Posted on Wednesday, June 3, 2026
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by Ian Gargan
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15 Comments
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Poor Jaxson Dart.

The rookie New York Giants quarterback recently committed one of the most unforgivable offenses imaginable in the eyes of the modern sports media.

No, he wasn’t arrested.

He didn’t violate NFL policy.

He didn’t get caught with drugs.

He didn’t assault anyone.

He didn’t embarrass his team.

He introduced the President of the United States.

That’s it.

That is the controversy.

And judging by the reaction from some corners of the media, you would think Dart had personally threatened the integrity of professional football.

Former MSNBC host Joy Reid called him an “idiot.” Commentators questioned his judgment. Analysts speculated about locker-room division. Articles were written about the supposed fallout from his decision. Reporters repeatedly pressed him to explain himself.

All for daring to accept the honor of introducing the President.

Let’s be honest. If the president standing beside Jaxson Dart had been Barack Obama, Joe Biden, or Kamala Harris, there would be no controversy at all.

In fact, there is a long history proving exactly that.

For decades, athletes have proudly appeared with presidents from both parties. Championship teams have visited the White House under Ronald Reagan, George H.W. Bush, Bill Clinton, George W. Bush, Barack Obama, Donald Trump, and Joe Biden.

Players smiled for photos.

They shook hands.

They gave speeches.

The media called it tradition.

The media called it an honor.

The media called it civic engagement.

Nobody demanded that athletes explain why they were standing beside President Obama.

Nobody questioned whether appearing with President Clinton would upset Republican teammates.

Nobody suggested athletes owed the public an apology for visiting President Biden.

Americans understood a simple concept: You can respect the office without agreeing with every policy. And even if you did disagree with the political views of your favorite athlete, who cares?

That distinction suddenly vanished the moment Donald Trump entered the picture.

Dart explained that his decision was rooted in respect for the presidency and influenced by his family’s military background.

Whether you agree with his politics is completely beside the point.

His explanation would have sounded perfectly normal to Americans for most of our nation’s history.

Yet today, apparently, introducing a president requires a public defense.

I’ll admit my own bias here. My father has been a lifelong New York Giants fan, and one of the earliest stories from my life is that he was tossing me in the air as a baby when the Giants won Super Bowl XXV following the 1990 season. I was born in 1987, and while I was too young to truly remember it, that family story has always felt like my first memory in this world. So yes, I’m a Jaxson Dart hopeful.

But the irony here is impossible to ignore whether you’re a Giants diehard or have never watched an NFL game in your life.

Sports media has spent years encouraging athletes to become politically active.

Athletes should use their platform, they say, for “social justice,” or “anti-racism,” or whatever the latest fad on the political left is.

Athletes should speak out.

Athletes should engage in civic life.

Until, apparently, they engage in civic life on behalf of the “wrong” person or set of beliefs.

In 2020, Russell Wilson publicly endorsed Joe Biden.

There were no national debates about whether he had damaged the locker room.

There were no demands for an apology.

In 2024, Philadelphia Eagles defensive tackle Thomas Booker helped lead “Athletes for Harris.”

More than 50 football players and coaches endorsed Kamala Harris. Fifteen Pro Football Hall of Famers publicly supported her campaign.

The media largely treated those endorsements as examples of democratic participation.

Fair enough.

They had every right to do so.

So does Jaxson Dart.

What exactly is the difference?

The act is the same.

The freedom is the same.

The only thing that changed was the politician.

And that is why so many Americans see this story for what it is.

A double standard.

To make matters even more absurd, consider the actual controversies the NFL has dealt with over the years.

Ray Rice was caught on video knocking his fiancée unconscious in an elevator.

Adrian Peterson faced child abuse charges.

Kareem Hunt was released after video surfaced showing him kicking a woman.

Deshaun Watson faced allegations from more than two dozen women and received a lengthy NFL suspension.

Seemingly every year, there are cases of players abusing their wives and girlfriends or committing other serious crimes. Those are genuine controversies, yet the league and the sports media conspire to downplay, dismiss, and sweep those offenses under the rug.

Jaxson Dart’s offense?

Introducing the President of the United States.

No arrest.

No suspension.

No criminal investigation.

No league discipline.

No victim.

Yet for several days, portions of the sports media appeared more interested in condemning Dart than discussing the conduct that has actually damaged the league’s reputation over the years.

That comparison should give every reasonable person pause.

The reaction says far more about our culture than it does about Jaxson Dart.

The message being sent is clear.

Athletes are free to be political.

Athletes are encouraged to speak out.

Athletes should absolutely use their platform.

Provided they use it in a way that certain commentators approve of.

Otherwise, they become a controversy.

Otherwise, they must explain themselves.

Otherwise, they are lectured about leadership, judgment, and responsibility.

Americans are noticing.

This isn’t really about Jaxson Dart.

It isn’t even about Donald Trump.

It is about whether the same standards apply to everyone.

If Russell Wilson can endorse Joe Biden without being treated as a threat to team unity, Jaxson Dart can introduce Donald Trump.

If Hall of Fame players can campaign for Kamala Harris without demands for apologies, Jaxson Dart can stand beside a Republican president.

If appearing with Democrat politicians is celebrated as civic engagement, appearing with a Republican president cannot suddenly become a scandal.

At least not if we’re being honest.

The reality is simple.

Jaxson Dart didn’t break a rule.

He broke a political taboo.

And judging by the reaction, that’s the one thing certain people still find unforgivable.

Ian Gargan is a contributor to AMAC Newsline and Managing Director of the AMAC Foundation. He writes on politics, culture, election integrity, constitutional freedoms, and issues impacting America’s seniors. Through his work with AMAC, Ian is focused on promoting civic engagement, strengthening informed citizenship, and advancing policies rooted in faith, family, freedom, and common sense.

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Max
Max
7 hours ago

As usual, MSM is blowing things out of proportion for the sake of trying to continue their attacks on President Trump for the good of their task masters, the Demos.

Lawrence Greenberg
Lawrence Greenberg
3 hours ago

Mr. Dart needs to sue those who have defamed him and those who seek to deny him his Constitutional rights.

Phil
Phil
3 hours ago

If they allow players to kneel during the National Anthem, then introducing the president is no big deal. The “journalists” who are throwing a hissy fit about it, are little more than narrow minded loud mouths.

Word of Truth
Word of Truth
2 hours ago

The fact that he has received so much criticism from the Leftists shows that he is doing the right thing.

Carla
Carla
2 hours ago

We only have one president, and his office should be respected. It’s interesting, and sad, that only Democrats are welcome in professional football these days.

Tammy Sikes
Tammy Sikes
1 hour ago

The only way to send a message to the national felon league is to stop supporting them! I did years ago, and my life has been much better for it.

Granny
Granny
2 hours ago

They’ll never change, because they don’t have the intelligence to do so.

Philip Seth Hammersley
Philip Seth Hammersley
2 hours ago

Dart seems to be a nice, patriotic guy! It is a shame that none of these liberals care if an athlete patronizes whorehouses or bars or slaps around his girlfriend/wife! There might be another reason they dog Dart if you think about it.

R E
R E
2 hours ago

The team mate who started this boondoggle needs to go he is not faithful to the team and I think he took a raghead mussie first name to boot making him not faithful to
America.

Melinda C
Melinda C
1 hour ago

TDS has infected every corner of our society. It’s too bad, but happily, Trump doesn’t let it interfere with the job he’s doing. In fact, he seems to relish fighting back.

AMERICA FIRST
AMERICA FIRST
2 hours ago

Still hope Giants trade that “bonehead Abdul Carter to Tehran. A small minded black hypocrite

Theresa Coughlin
Theresa Coughlin
2 minutes ago

I guess it’s true what people say: if it weren’t for double standards, the NFL would have no standards at all.

Alfred Wilson
Alfred Wilson
52 minutes ago

Tim Tebow couldn’t kneel to respect God, but many could kneel to disrespect our National Anthem and country.

Mark M.
Mark M.
35 minutes ago

My only main issue about this whole thing is that a United States Citizen, does not have the right to visit or be around the President of the United States if he or she chooses. According to Demonrat Liberals…

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