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O’Donnell Uses Churchill and UK MP Comments to Compare Trump to Hitler
In his constant stretch of monologues, on Tuesday night, MS NOW host Lawrence O’Donnell made more Hitler comparisons about President Trump and Iran. He latched onto the comments from a U.K. Parliament member who called Trump a “gangster” as similar to Winston Churchill's comments about Hitler, where Churchill called the dictator a “monster of wickedness” amid World War II.
His comments continued a trend of O’Donnell’s Hitler comparisons, even as just last week he suggested Hitler wasn’t as bad as Trump because he didn’t threaten to kill a whole civilization. Did he miss something?
O’Donnell spent a large portion of his monologue on the “international sound of resistance to Trump” as he used election results in Hungary and Canada as his examples.
Tuesday night, MS NOW's Lawrence O'Donnell once again made a Trump-Hitler comparison, as he likened Winston Churchill's comments from 1941, which called Hitler a "monster of wickedness," to Ed Davey's comments in UK Parliament that called Trump a "dangerous and corrupt gangster." pic.twitter.com/bH0bzZX1SJ
— Nick (@nspin310) April 15, 2026
The Last Word host introduced “resistance” in the British House of Commons as he shared an old statement from former British PM Winston Churchill from 1941 during World War II: “Hitler is a monster of wickedness.”
He then shared the statement heard the other day in U.K. Parliament from Liberal Democrats leader Ed Davey, whose party had gained in polls but had no current power in U.K. Politics, unless Kier Starmer’s low approval would lead to the fall of the Labour Party. Davey called Trump, as O’Donnell described it, “a dangerous and corrupt gangster.”
O’Donnell used Davey’s comments to say the U.S. was not the leader of the free world anymore:
A monster of wickedness. Words to describe the worst, most murderous dictator in European history and world history. And yesterday in the British parliament, the words “he is a dangerous and corrupt gangster” were used to describe the President of the United States, an office once occupied by the President who beat Adolf Hitler in World War II.
He then continued to go after the phrase ‘leader of the free world,’ which he said no one used anymore, to praise Davey’s full comments about “how reckless, immoral, and completely outside the bounds of international law this president is.” Here was O’Donnell on the phrase “leader of the free world”:
The phrase was always a fiction, falsely suggesting that the world could be led by anyone or even half the world, the so-called free world, could be led. The American news media that's so mindlessly used that term for all of Donald Trump's lifetime, as unconsciously, I presume, dropped it. When is the last time you heard Donald Trump referred to as the leader of the free world? No one in the news media could possibly use that phrase about him.
O’Donnell finally actually played the Davey clip from Parliament, which was focused on international law and the “end of civilization” Truth Social post. Davey said: “Regrettably, he is no friend of the United Kingdom. He is no leader of the free world. He is a dangerous and corrupt gangster, and that is how we must treat him.”
It was quite more than a little stretch to compare Winston Churchill to a modern U.K. Member of Parliament’s comments about a world leader he does not like. O’Donnell clearly could not help himself with the Hitler comparisons.
The transcript is below. Click "expand":
MS NOW’s The Last Word with Lawrence O’Donnell
April 14, 2026
10:13:17 PM Eastern
(...)
LAWRENCE O’DONNELL: The international sound of resistance to Donald Trump was heard in the British House of Commons, and the language used to describe Donald Trump was on a par with the language Winston Churchill used to describe Adolf Hitler during World War II.
WINSTON CHURCHILL (JUNE 22, 1941): Hitler is a monster of wickedness.
O’DONNELL: A monster of wickedness. Words to describe the worst, most murderous dictator in European history and world history. And yesterday in the British parliament, the words “he is a dangerous and corrupt gangster” were used to describe the President of the United States, an office once occupied by the President who beat Adolf Hitler in World War II. The leader of the free world is a phrase invented during the television age and applied by the American news media to the president of the United States. While most of the rest of the world didn't quite see it that way.
The phrase was always a fiction, falsely suggesting that the world could be led by anyone or even half the world, the so-called free world, could be led. The American news media that's so mindlessly used that term for all of Donald Trump's lifetime, as unconsciously, I presume, dropped it. When is the last time you heard Donald Trump referred to as the leader of the free world? No one in the news media could possibly use that phrase about him. Now, the news media that's so overdid that phrase has mercifully dropped it without ever having had a meeting about, hey, let's not use that phrase anymore. It just disappeared. It's just so obvious to everyone, including everyone in the news media.
But Donald Trump is not even a leader of his own country. And so the phrase has disappeared. Leader of the free world. It has just disappeared from recent usage, but it was revived yesterday on the floor of the House of Commons, only to rip it away from Donald Trump. Edward Davey is the leader of the Liberal Democrats in parliament, and he rose yesterday to say this.
ED DAVEY (UK LIBERAL DEMOCRATS LEADER): A whole civilization will die tonight. Words I never thought I would hear from an American president. And though Donald Trump thankfully didn't follow through this time, these words are a stark reminder of how reckless, immoral, and completely outside the bounds of international law this president is.
Regrettably, he is no friend of the United Kingdom. He is no leader of the free world. He is a dangerous and corrupt gangster, and that is how we must treat him.
O’DONNELL: A dangerous and corrupt gangster that will no doubt be the title of at least one biography of Donald Trump, probably by a British historian. That is the kind of description of Donald Trump that will live in history because of where it was given, because of when it was given, and because of the otherwise positive history, centuries of positive history between presidents of the United States and the British Parliament.
Presidents of the United States, like Franklin Delano Roosevelt during World War II, were treated as heroes by the British parliament, heroes. And now the president of the United States can be called a dangerous and corrupt gangster in parliament. And no one shouts that down. No one disagrees, and that is how we must treat him, says Edward Davey. And no one disagrees with that. Edward Davey described Donald Trump's latest fit of madness in his war in Iran.
(...)