
Hunter Biden, the son of former President Joe Biden, argued that the wealthiest Americans often escape accountability while ordinary citizens bear the consequences, comments he made during a rare, wide-ranging interview published Monday, as reported by Fox News.
Biden appeared on The Shawn Ryan Show, where he spoke with host Shawn Ryan about a range of topics, including political polarization, social media, and what he described as a lack of consequences for those at the highest levels of wealth and influence.
During the conversation, Biden suggested that regardless of which political party controls Congress, the people who benefit most are those at the very top of the economic ladder.
“You know, who’s benefiting right now?” Biden said. “Who there, you know, whether the Democrats are in control of Congress or whether the Republicans are, who ultimately seems to be benefiting?”
Ryan responded, “Well, I can tell you who’s not benefiting. Not normal people.”
“Yeah. Not regular guys, not the guys you served with, not the guys that I went to high school with, not the, you know, nobody that I know,” Biden said.
“You know the people that are benefiting and the people that seem to have always some way [to] avoid the consequences and win, and that’s, you know, the .1%. And it’s not even the 1% anymore.”
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Biden added that he was not arguing that “all billionaires are evil,” but said he believed society as a whole is affected by technology-driven systems that operate without meaningful oversight.
He pointed specifically to social media platforms, which he said influence public perception while escaping accountability.
“What we do is that we allow ourselves to be driven by our algorithms to believe things that just are not even remotely true, and which then we all give up. Like you just said, nobody’s held accountable,” Biden said.
The comments drew attention in part because of Biden’s own legal history and the presidential pardon he received from his father.
During the final months of Joe Biden’s presidency in 2024, the former president issued a sweeping pardon for his son. The pardon covered all crimes Hunter Biden “has committed or may have committed” between Jan. 1, 2014, and Dec. 1, 2024.
The decision marked a sharp reversal from years of public statements by the Biden administration asserting that no pardon was under consideration. The move was made after Hunter Biden had faced multiple federal prosecutions.
Hunter Biden had been under federal investigation since 2018. He was found guilty of three felony firearm offenses related to the unlawful possession of a firearm.
Separately, he was charged with federal tax crimes stemming from the failure to pay at least $1.4 million in taxes. He later pleaded guilty to those tax charges ahead of trial.
The pardon effectively closed the door on further legal consequences stemming from those cases and any other potential offenses within the specified timeframe.
Biden did not directly address the pardon during the interview excerpts, but his remarks about accountability and consequences prompted renewed attention, given his personal circumstances.
The interview represented one of Hunter Biden’s more extensive public appearances in recent years, offering commentary on politics, technology, and economic power while reigniting debate over the contrast between his public statements and the legal outcome of his own cases.
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