The Bidens bullied Hunter Biden’s ex-wife and daughter out of their last names

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Biden Daughter-in-Law
FILE – Hunter Biden walks with his then-wife Kathleen, along with Vice President Joe Biden and Jill Biden for the internment services for Sen. Edward Kennedy at Arlington National Cemetery in Arlington, Va, on Aug. 29, 2009. Kathleen Buhle, the ex-wife of President Joe Biden’s son Hunter, says she has “total control over my life now,” five years after her divorce, as she opens up about her marriage in a new memoir. (Jim Bourg/Pool via AP) JIM BOURG/AP

The Bidens bullied Hunter Biden’s ex-wife and daughter out of their last names

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Navy Joan, the 4-year-old daughter Hunter Biden fought to deprive of his famous family’s name, is not the first female relative that the president has thrown under the bus for personal gain. Joe Biden, who repeatedly says he has six grandchildren instead of the accurate count of seven, once conveniently ignored the existence of his daughter-in-law Kathleen Buhle to throw his support behind her cheating husband Hunter Biden.

In his memoir and throughout interviews, the first son has publicly maintained that his relationship with his brother’s widow, Hallie Biden, began in the autumn of 2016, while he was in the throes of his crack addiction. But in her memoir, Buhle says that Hunter Biden, whom she had already forgiven for sleeping with prostitutes while traveling on “business” abroad, neglected their daughters and marriage to stay at Hallie’s house in Delaware for over a year prior, beginning right after Beau Biden’s death in the spring of 2015. Buhle only found out about the affair in November of 2016, after her oldest two daughters discovered texts between Hallie and Hunter and told Buhle’s therapist. The next day, Buhle boxed up Hunter Biden’s things, and the next month, she filed for divorce.

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Yet when the New York Post got the story in March of 2017 that Hunter Biden and Hallie Biden were in a relationship — described correctly by the broadsheet as an affair — the future president ignored the fact that his son cheated on the mother of three of his grand-daughters.

“We are all lucky that Hunter and Hallie found each other as they were putting their lives together again after such sadness,” the Democrat told the Post. “They have mine and Jill’s full and complete support and we are happy for them.”

Although Buhle didn’t directly comment on Joe’s statement in the story, she did respond to Hunter Biden’s assertion in the piece that he was “lucky” to have friends and family support him and Hallie Biden.

“They were lucky?” Buhle writes in her memoir. “Supported every step of the way? No mention of the family he’d left behind? As I drove home, the statement played over and over in my head. Why hadn’t he at least warned us?”

One can imagine that Buhle’s anger rightly extended toward the family supporting Hunter Biden and his sister-in-law.

There is one other peculiar similarity between Navy Joan and Buhle’s stories: namely the Biden family’s vitriol over the two using their notorious moniker.

“When we were in the middle of our divorce, Hunter often taunted me about having kept the Biden name,” Buhle writes. “‘Are you enjoying your last name?’ he’d ask on his worst days, when he was tired or using or both. He called me many names and accused me of many awful things, but the idea that somehow I wasn’t entitled to the name that had been mine for 24 years hurt me in a deep and personal way. It was as if he wanted to erase all evidence of our marriage. It felt like a slap.”

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Buhle says that she used to feel “proud” when people asked her if she was related to the Biden patriarch, but she ends her memoir just as Navy Joan’s mother ended her child support battle, relinquishing the Biden last name.

The teaching of these two tales is obvious enough: no woman — blood relation or not — is too indispensable for the Biden dynasty if she gets in the way of the crackhead crown prince to the throne. Cheaters are welcome, but illegitimate daughters and discarded mothers, beware.

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