On Wednesday morning, CNN’s New Day aired a panel featuring eight Republican women from the Dallas, Texas area. In the face of biased, manipulative questions, the women pushed back against the liberal media.

CNN anchor Randi Kaye asked the panel of women a series of pointed questions, ones designed to pressure them to denounce President Trump so that CNN could show its viewers that the President is losing support amongst female voters. Only, the women pushed back:

KATHLEEN LIEBERMAN [PANELIST]: Whoever wrote these questions up, it's clear they're manipulative, instead of extracting the truth. PANELIST: It’s a tactic. LIEBERMAN: Because when you say, you know, don’t you think he’s a racist? You're accusing us. You're accusing him.

Kaye got heated, and insisted that she was merely asking questions:

KAYE: I’m asking, I’m not accusing! I’m asking you what you think. LIEBERMAN: But your tone! Okay, it's irrelevant. It has nothing to do with the real – it has nothing to do with the premise of the issues here.

The anchor at one point was so astounded that the women didn’t fall into the liberal media’s groupthink, that she felt the need to read the definition of racism to the panel:

KAYE: Let me just share with you the definition of racism from Meriam-Webster Dictionary: A belief that race is the primary determinant of human traits and capacity, and that racial differences produce an inherent superiority of a particular race. Based on that definition, do you not think what the President has been saying – PANEL: No! No! GINA O’BRIANT [PANELIST]: No. He dated a black woman for 2 years. Two of his wives are immigrants. He is not a xenophobic racist. DENA MILLER [PANELIST]: If the first black billionaire is endorsing President Trump, how can you call him racist?

After airing the interview, host Alisyn Camerota believed that it was “fascinating” to hear the reasoning of someone who disagreed with the media spun narrative. She then went on to imply that Trump supporters won’t listen to academics “with facts and numbers”:

CAMEROTA: Randi, great panel. So fascinating to hear their reasoning and their rational. Thank you very much for sharing it with us this morning. You know, I think that we've come to the point where what sort of the academics who think they can impress upon people with facts and with numbers, and they’ll get them to change their mind. I think that that doesn't work. What the President is great at is appealing to people's feelings and their guts.

She wrapped up the segment by stating that the right only defends the President because he plays on their fears. That’s only a reasonable conclusion when one ignores the dissatisfaction the country has with the media’s insistence to vilify anything conservatives do.

Here is the complete transcript from the segment: