On Thursday night, conservatives worldwide were able to relive feelings of jubilation and bask in liberal meltdowns from 2016, thanks to exit polls predicting a Conservative Party landslide in the United Kingdom’s latest General Election. In the end, projections show a resounding mandate to Boris Johnson for Brexit. Unfortunately, the liberal U.S. broadcast networks didn’t take it well.

In particular, the worst such individual was NBC News foreign correspondent Bill Neely, refusing to mention the following in his hideous NBC Nightly News segment: Jeremy Corbyn, the Labour Party, their anti-Semitism, and their far-left proposals. In other words, Neely didn’t just tell a partial picture, but instead almost nothing at all.

Instead, he trashed Conservatives and Johnson.

Neely stated that, if the exit polls panned out, “it means Boris Johnson will lead Britain” and only won “the Brexit election” after “a bitter angry campaign” in which he “often avoid[ed] media questions,” including an “escap[e] into a milk fridge.”

The NBC journalist also peddled fake news, hyping Johnson for “swiping a reporter's phone to avoid seeing a photo of a sick boy.” As our friend Shelby Talcott at the Daily Caller News Foundation noted, Johnson did look down at the photo and assertions otherwise are wrong.

Neely continued attacking Johnson, touting how “[t]rust in him was low” before concluding that “Johnson tonight appears to have won the prize....but now, the hard part. Years of trade talks ahead. A deal with the U.S. far from certain.”

Someone sounded bitter!

Over on the CBS Evening News with Norah O’Donnell, things weren’t much better as instead of anger, feelings of sadness were present.

Foreign correspondent Mark Phillips had the story, fretting that “[i]n the past, these exit polls have proved very reliable” and showed that Johnson was on track to receive the “clean win” needed to carry out Brexit.

Unlike Neely (and as we’d see with ABC), Phillips actually mentioned both Corbyn and Labour before ending with an allusion to “often-dubious facts” that appeared on campaign posters (click “expand”):

PHILLIPS: Of course like the styrofoam blocks in his visual aid, it's all a bit messier than that. For starters, the main opposition Labour Party leader, Jeremy Corbyn, wanted to fight a different battle, reinvesting in public services, re-nationalizing major industries, and taxing the rich to do it. CORBYN: Things cannot go on as they were before. PHILLIPS: This was a different kind of election. Remember that scene from the film Love Actually where a secret message is silently conveyed on a doorstep? KEIRA KNIGHTLEY [in Love Actually]: It's Carol singers. PHILLIPS: In this vote it was Boris Johnson at the door and the cue cards were about politics. This was a social media campaign where individual voters were targeted on their small screens with ads like this and where often-dubious facts came from sometimes anonymous posters. Old party loyalties went out the window in this election. What mattered was whether you were for Britain leaving the E.U. or against it and perhaps whether you were tired of the whole Brexit saga. Boris Johnson took a big gamble in calling this vote, Norah, and he appears to have won.

While CBS gave the election just over two minutes and NBC around 90 seconds, ABC’s World News Tonight could only fester 59 seconds.

Foreign correspondent James Longman told anchor David Muir that “the exit polls are revealing a huge, landslide victory for Conservative Prime Minister and Donald Trump favorite, Boris Johnson” after “a campaign characterized by disinformation” (which was a clear knock trying to taint Conservative victories).

“Tonight, it looks like Johnson will remain prime minister and work towards pulling the U.K. out of the E.U. as he’s pledged by January 31st. But the huge task ahead, negotiating a trade deal. The risk of a no deal Brexit still very much a possibility,” he concluded.

To see the relevant transcript from December 12's NBC Nightly News with Lester Holt, click “expand.”