Two of the three conservative voices on the network, Scarborough and Nicolle Wallace, quickly came to Brzezinski's defense in the wake of the vicious and vitriolic attack.
'As a former communications director, there’s a single press strategy for this White House: It’s called an apology,' said Wallace while appearing on the air on Thursday afternoon.
'As a woman who was fortunate enough to work in the White House as a public servant, all of the women collecting paychecks from the U.S. taxpayers, Dina Powell, Kellyanne Conway, Elaine Chow, Betsy DeVos, you should all go on the record and condemn your boss's comments, and you should work behind the scenes to educate him about just how offensive they are.'
Wallace did not however include the First Daughter in her remarks, perhaps still being of the belief that the children of the president should be off the table as a result of her years working for George W. Bush.
His twin daughters, Barbara and Jenna, did not have jobs in the White House however working for their father's administration.
Scarborough meanwhile retweeted a communications exec at NBC to get his point across, posting Mark Kornblau's tweet that read: 'Never imagined a day when I would think to myself, "it is beneath my dignity to respond to the President of the United States."'
The only other conservative on the network, Van Susteren, said nothing about the comments.
Van Susteren's ousting also came on the same day that her former Fox News colleagues signed a long-term deal to stay on at the network, where she is now one of the most valued and recognized primetime players.
And, in another stroke of luck for executives, it happened on a week when Megyn Kelly is off the air, meaning that reports rehashing the pair's past problems at Fox News will have died down by early next week.