The Nationwide Republican Senatorial Committee advised in a current memo that its candidates assault Vice President Kamala Harris for, amongst different issues, being “weird.” Sadly for them, this requested the apparent query: Who was weirder than Donald Trump, his new working mate JD Vance, or the Republican Occasion?
Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz gained nationwide consideration after he went on MSNBC to laud Harris’ first marketing campaign speech, saying about Republicans, “These are weird people on the other side. They want to take books away. They want to be in your exam room. … These are weird ideas.”
Tagging the GOP and its insurance policies as “weird” has rapidly taken off. When requested about Vance’s offensive remarks about “childless cat ladies” working the Democratic Occasion, even impartial Sen. Joe Manchin needed to admit, “That truly is just a weird position to take. I’ve never heard that before.”
Republicans are predictably aggrieved by the general public acknowledging how off-putting their conduct is. Proper-wing wraith and Fox Information host Laura Ingraham spent a whole phase of her present making an attempt desperately to color Harris because the bizarre one. “Dems: The Real Part of Weird,” learn the chyron beneath her rant.
Vivek Ramaswamy stomped his toes and known as the speaking level “dumb & juvenile,” solely to have Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez break down how “super weird” conservatives are today.
“Being obsessed with repressing women is goofy,” the New York Democrat tweeted. “Trying to watch what LGBTQ+ people do all the time is abnormal. Punishing people who don’t have biological offspring is creepy.”
Republican Sen. Marco Rubio weighed in on the matter Tuesday, saying, “They called us weird so I’ll call them weirder. That’s what I used to do back in high school.” His I-know-you-are-but-what-am-I protection is undercut by the truth that he and different conservatives spent hours whining about how a five-minute phase of a virtually four-hour Olympics opening ceremony ruined the whole Olympics for them.
It seems to be just like the Nationwide Republican Senatorial Committee is perhaps proper: Mentioning how “weird” your opponent is would possibly certainly be a successful message.
Let’s defeat the “weird” this fall. Donate to Kamala Harris now.