‘West Wing’ Star Bradley Whitford Rips Cheryl Hines For Being ‘Silent’ On ‘Lunatic Husband’ RFK Jr.
“West Wing” alum Bradley Whitford was giving notes to fellow actor Cheryl Hines ― and they weren’t about her performance in “Curb Your Enthusiasm.”
In a sarcastic call-out on X Saturday, Whitford accused Hines of remaining silent after her spouse, Robert F. Kennedy Jr., suspended his campaign for president and endorsed Republican Donald Trump.
“Hey @CherylHines, way to stay silent while your lunatic husband throws his support behind the adjudicated rapist who brags about stripping women of their fundamental rights,” Whitford wrote with a video of Trump thanking U.S. Supreme Court judges ― three of whom the former president appointed ― for overturning Roe v. Wade.
“Gutsy. Great example for the kids. Profile in courage,” Whitford told Hines in a snarky reference to John F. Kennedy’s book “Profiles in Courage.”
Hey @CherylHines, way to stay silent while your lunatic husband throws his support behind the adjudicated rapist who brags about stripping women of their fundamental rights. Gutsy. Great example for the kids. Profile in courage. https://t.co/DrhXY3npcF
— Bradley Whitford (@BradleyWhitford) August 24, 2024
On Friday, after RFK Jr. announced his election withdrawal and allegiance to Trump, Hines praised her husband’s decision “to run on the principle of unity” in a thank-you to campaign workers on X.
In January, Hines appeared to half-joke that a political arrangement with Trump could end her marriage. Asked then by Variety at a final-season “Curb” red carpet if Kennedy would consider being Trump’s running mate, Kennedy replied, “I don’t think that my marriage would survive it.”
Hines added, “I think he’s right.”
Trump was found guilty of sexual abuse in a civil lawsuit brought by writer E. Jean Carroll. Judge Lewis Kaplan, however, noted that Trump’s digital penetration of her basically amounted to rape. Kaplan wrote, “In other words, [Trump] in fact did ‘rape’ Ms. Carroll as that term commonly is used and understood in contexts outside of the New York Penal Law.”