When the curtain is pulled back on Fox News, the drama is rarely subtle. But even seasoned media watchers were stunned this week when newly unredacted court documents revealed private messages from Jeanine Pirro — former Fox host turned U.S. Attorney for Washington, D.C. — torching none other than Sean Hannity, the network’s king of prime time.

The Washington Post obtained the explosive texts as part of Smartmatic’s $2.7 billion defamation suit against Fox. The language was sharp, unfiltered, and unmistakable: Pirro branded Hannity an “egomaniac,” describing his Oval Office theatrics in a scene that could have been ripped from a political satire.

“Hannity stormed in like he owns the place,” Pirro texted on Oct. 27, 2020, recalling a meeting with Trump and his most loyal media ally. “Throws his papers on the Pres desk and says, ‘you don’t mind if I use your private bathroom,’ and walks into bathroom within Oval and uses it. Looks at me and says, I got to talk to him. It’s all abt him, period. No one else matters.”

The revelation has electrified Washington, media circles, and Trumpworld alike — laying bare the egos, rivalries, and raw calculations that defined Fox’s relationship with Trump in the final, chaotic days of his presidency.

Jeanine Pirro


Fox News Civil War, Unredacted

The texts were originally filed under seal in April but became public this week after a judge ordered redactions lifted. And while Smartmatic’s core lawsuit focuses on Fox’s role in amplifying baseless claims of voter fraud, the Pirro messages provide an unvarnished glimpse into the interpersonal drama behind the cameras.

Hannity — long considered Trump’s late-night confidant — is depicted as entitled, domineering, and dismissive of colleagues. Pirro’s contempt is palpable, painting a portrait of a colleague who saw the Oval Office as an extension of his studio.

Jeanine Pirro

“It’s not just a professional slight,” said a former Fox producer who spoke on condition of anonymity. “For Pirro to call Hannity an ‘egomaniac’ in writing shows just how toxic things were inside Fox. Everyone wanted access to Trump, and Hannity acted like he had exclusive rights.”


Pirro’s Political Gamble

Equally eye-catching are Pirro’s texts with Ronna McDaniel, then-chair of the Republican National Committee. “I work so hard for the party across the country. I’m the Number 1 watched show on all news cable all weekend. I work so hard for the President and party,” she wrote in September 2020.

The language suggests Pirro blurred — if not erased — the line between journalism and activism, undermining Fox’s claims of neutrality. Smartmatic’s lawyers argue these texts are smoking-gun evidence that Pirro’s loyalty to Trump outweighed her duty to fact-based reporting.

And perhaps not coincidentally, Pirro would later be rewarded. After leaving Fox in May 2024, she was sworn in as U.S. Attorney for Washington, D.C. — one of Trump’s most consequential appointments of his second term.


A Desperate Bid for Trump’s Favor?

Legal analysts note that Pirro’s political devotion may have been more than ideological. Smartmatic points out that Pirro’s ex-husband, Albert Pirro, received a last-minute pardon from Trump in January 2021.

“They’re suggesting she wasn’t just carrying water for Trump out of belief,” said constitutional lawyer Paul Rosenzweig. “She had personal skin in the game.”

If true, it would add another layer of intrigue — that Pirro’s bombast and on-air loyalty may have been part of a calculated bid for clemency.


Censorship, Fury, and Backstage Battles

NEW YORK, NEW YORK - SEPTEMBER 13: Sean Hannity host a live taping of Hannity at Fox News Channel Studios on September 13, 2023 in New York City. (Photo by Steven Ferdman/Getty Images)

The court filings also unearth Pirro’s frustrations with Fox itself. After producers pulled one of her shows over election-fraud rhetoric, she fumed in a message to Hannity:

“I’M TIRED OF THE CENSORSHIP AND I’M EMBARRASSED BY HOW THEY CALLED THIS ELECTION.”

Hannity’s reply was characteristically biting: “Fox News promoting u every 5 seconds. It’s hilarious.”

To outside observers, the exchange reads like two media titans caught between grievance and ego — fighting censorship while simultaneously jockeying for attention.


The Broader Fallout

Jeanine Pirro was sworn in as interim U.S. Attorney for Washington, DC on May 28 but was confirmed 50-45 by the Senate to the role permanently before lawmakers left for their August recess.

Fox News, for its part, continues to deny wrongdoing, insisting that its anchors reported claims made by Trump allies but did not endorse them. Still, the newly unredacted documents pull back the curtain on a combustible mix of personal rivalries, political allegiance, and raw ambition.

“These texts remind us that what looks like a united front on TV was, in reality, a battlefield of clashing egos,” said media historian Brian Stelter. “Pirro’s shots at Hannity are remarkable because they confirm what many insiders whispered: even within Trump’s favorite network, loyalty was conditional and fragile.”

Maria Bartiromo

For Smartmatic, the texts are another tool in its high-stakes lawsuit. For Fox, they are a public-relations nightmare, exposing fissures the network has long tried to conceal. And for Hannity and Pirro — now both wielding power, one behind a microphone and the other inside Trump’s Justice Department — the fallout may only just be beginning.

The last word belongs to Pirro herself. “It’s all abt him, period. No one else matters.” A dagger aimed not just at Hannity’s ego, but at the myth of Fox News unity.