WATCH: Journalists Deny Reality, Claim Biden Didn't Call Trump Supporters 'Garbage' in Latest Misinformation Scandal

President Joe Biden called Donald Trump supporters "garbage" on Tuesday, according to a transcript posted by CNN correspondent MJ Lee, not to mention the fact that there is video of Biden saying it. "The only garbage I see floating out there is [Trump] supporters," Biden said during a Zoom call with Latino activists. The remark was reminiscent of Hillary Clinton's infamous attack during her failed 2016 campaign, when she referred to Trump supporters as "deplorables."

The post WATCH: Journalists Deny Reality, Claim Biden Didn't Call Trump Supporters 'Garbage' in Latest Misinformation Scandal appeared first on .

The Atlantic suggests Kamala Harris' shallowness and cringey speeches are assets — at least on TikTok



Some voters might find themselves rethinking Vice President Kamala Harris' competence after watching her mistakenly claim that the U.S. and the "Republic of North Korea" have a "strong and enduring" alliance; philosophize about the "significance of time"; talk down to rocket scientists; cluelessly clap along to a song protesting her presence; lecture about geopolitics; or struggle when going off-script.

Rather than write off Harris' cringey speeches, viral gaffes, and sudden onset accent changes as "cheap fakes," the liberal media appears keen to try a different strategy: reframe Harris' weaknesses as strengths.

The Democrat auditioning to become leader of the free world is not an airy kakistocrat prone to word salads but rather a fun candidate whose "oddball charm satisfies the content demands of the moment" — at least according to the Atlantic's Spencer Kornhaber.

Kornhaber suggested Monday that the Democratic nominee's "viral moments are fun to watch because they show a serious person having, well, fun."

'The point was not what she was saying, but how she was saying it.'

"They don't come off as overly canned either," said the Atlantic staff writer. "They're too idiosyncratic for that. Harris's laugh has already been much dissected — with sexist overtones — but that giggle is just a small part of her larger performance of authenticity. Being in proximity to the nuclear football has not stopped her from finding life amusing, quite clearly."

Although Harris is aiming for the White House, the Atlantic indicated the moments Republicans might otherwise mock along with her levity — be it real or feigned — makes her "perfect for TikTok."

With Harris in the race, Trump’s communication style is striking a different contrast. The rambling campaign-rally format that he pioneered was, after all, a pre-TikTok invention, one that helped cable news fill hours of airtime. Against an opponent whose social-media appeal derives from everyday breeziness — who will, for example, riff with you about recipes — Trump’s insult-comic bluster could come to seem stilted or even, yes, weird.

Harris' TikTok appeal also has ABC News wondering whether she can "ride memes all the way to the White House."

"The demographics of the people who tend to vote for the Democratic Party tend to skew younger, so they need to attract, in particular, the younger audiences, which are much harder to reach through traditional media," Pinar Yildirim, a marketing and economics professor at the University of Pennsylvania, told the liberal outlet.

Ted Rall recently suggested in the Wall Street Journal that "Democrats are evidently true believers in Ms. Harris, though she's given them little to believe in"; that the "Kamala Harris cult needs a personality."

Kornhaber alternatively appears to believe that the breezy variety of TikTok candidate does not necessarily have to present Democrats with something to believe in but rather with something entertaining to watch.

He noted, for instance, that at Harris' campaign rally in Atlanta last week, the vice president — who still has yet to post any platform details on her campaign website — was "coy on policy details" but delivered a rhetoric-heavy speech "with a kind of light, smiling swagger that felt unusual for a presidential campaign."

"Clips were everywhere the next day. The point was not what she was saying, but how she was saying it: a hallmark, perhaps now more than ever, of what people want from politics," added Kornhaber.

Harris' supposed TikTok stardom may, however, be a double-edged sword if even relevant to begin with.

"Harris's online appeal could curdle if her team tries to flagrantly force viral moments to happen, rather than stand back and allow the public to react to her persona," said Kornhaber. "In any case, it's certainly not clear that an amused electorate is one that's more likely to vote. But so far, at least, the ease — and yes, silliness — with which Harris carries herself is earning a precious commodity: positive attention."

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Harris Campaign Forced To Clean Up Kamala's Bizarre Word Salad About 'Diplomacy'

Kamala Harris's campaign took a page out of the Biden White House playbook on Friday, issuing an edited transcript that cleaned up a bizarre comment in which Harris lauded Joe Biden as "a president who understands the power of diplomacy and understands the strength that rests in understanding the significance of diplomacy and strengthening alliances."

The post Harris Campaign Forced To Clean Up Kamala's Bizarre Word Salad About 'Diplomacy' appeared first on .

Vice President Who? Biden Mistakes Kamala for Trump in Another Embarrassing Name Gaffe

President Joe Biden made a second name gaffe in as many hours, referring to Vice President Kamala Harris as "Vice President Trump" not long after he introduced Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelensky as "President Putin."

The post Vice President Who? Biden Mistakes Kamala for Trump in Another Embarrassing Name Gaffe appeared first on .

White House Officially Claims Biden Has Made 148 Mistakes During 2024 Public Remarks

White House Officially Claims Biden Has Made 148 Mistakes During 2024 Public Remarks

Kamala Harris cluelessly claps along to Puerto Rican song protesting her visit



Kamala Harris visited Puerto Rico for the first time as vice president Friday in an apparent effort to drum up support among Hispanic voters — even though Puerto Rican residents cannot vote in U.S. presidential elections.

While making her way around the territory's capital of San Juan, Harris seized upon an opportunity to embarrass herself.

Video shows Harris, 59, standing in a courtyard near La Goyco Workshop Community and Cultural Center, clapping along and smiling as a group of locals drum and sing in Spanish. Unbeknownst to the Democrat, these locals were protesting her visit.

Harris grins and claps through several lines of the protest song, but then Mariana Reyes Angleró, executive director at La Goyco, appears to lean in and tell the vice president the meaning of the lyrics. The mood immediately changes.

Frankie Miranda, the president of the Hispanic Federation standing on Harris' left, scowls. Harris stops clapping altogether but nods to the beat with pursed lips.

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According to one translation, the lyrics were, "The vice president arrived making history / We want to know what do you think of the colony? / We will continue playing the full song of my country / Long live free Palestine and also Haiti!"

The Associated Press reported that one protester yelled, "Yankee, go home!"

Protesters held signs that said, "Kamala Harris war criminal" and "Free Palestine, Free Puerto Rico."

Joseline Velásquez, a spokeswoman for the radical group Jornada: Se Acabaron Las Promesas, was among the demonstrators who turned out to condemn Harris during her visit over the Biden administration's handling of the Israel-Hamas war, reported NBC News.

"It is disrespectful," said Velásquez, who perceived Harris' trip ultimately to be a shakedown for campaign money.

The stated purpose of Harris' visit was to emphasize the Biden administration's "ongoing commitment to supporting the island's recovery and renewal" and to "highlight how Puerto Rico's economic turnaround has begun thanks to more than $140 billion in federal obligations for the island."

The unstated purpose of the trip was to boost Democratic outreach among Hispanics, particularly the over 5 million Puerto Ricans living in the United States who will be able to cast more than a symbolic vote.

CBS News indicated that recent polling shows Harris' running mate has shed a great deal of support among Hispanics since 2020, dropping from 65% to 53%.

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Biden Claims He Met Dead European Leader—Again

President Joe Biden on Wednesday reportedly said he spoke at a 2021 meeting to a European leader who has been dead for years, a gaffe Biden has made multiple times in the past five days.

The post Biden Claims He Met Dead European Leader—Again appeared first on Washington Free Beacon.

WATCH: Biden Struggles To Remember Hamas's Name

President Joe Biden appeared to forget the name of the Hamas terrorist group on Tuesday while answering a reporter’s question about negotiations over a possible hostage deal between Israel and Hamas. 

The post WATCH: Biden Struggles To Remember Hamas's Name appeared first on Washington Free Beacon.

Elise Stefanik Spins Trump’s Pelosi-Haley Mix-Up

'President Trump has not lost a step'