Democrats say Kamala is a “brat” and Trump is a “wacko.”
Everyone from the Kamala Harris campaign to Hillary Clinton to AOC to Chuck Schumer. A new line of attack was adopted.He called Donald Trump and his running mate J.D. Vance “weird.”
Minnesota Governor Tim Walz was one of the first to jump on the bandwagon.
“That’s weird, that feels weird,” Waltz said. He spoke on MSNBC last week.
he Doubled “Say it with me: It’s weird,” Waltz wrote in an appearance on The X Channel. Waltz then appeared on CNN to slam the Trump campaign for its “bizarre behavior.”
Waltz unleashed a wave of strangeness.
Harris HQ Account Tweeted the photo “Things are getting weird…” she captioned a photo of Vance. Heaped insults on me “J.D. Vance is weird and creepy.”
Meanwhile, Sen. Chuck Schumer argued that Trump probably regrets picking Vance, telling CBS’ “Face the Nation” that “every day that passes reveals that Vance has done something more extreme, more bizarre, more outlandish.”
Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez called Trump’s policies a “platform for incels.” He continued:“It’s so weird, and people need to know that.”
Hillary Clinton also got in on the action. Post to X“If Republican leaders don’t like being called weird, creepy, and controlling, they can just try not to be weird, creepy, and controlling.”
A fake Trump-Vance election poster with the word “WEIRD” written at the bottom It began to circulateyeahg OnlineMost critics have focused on Vance’s controversial comments about “childless, cat-loving women” and his proposal to give parents more voting rights.
“What’s weird is not a provocation in a school, it’s an observation,” said Hawaii Sen. Brian Schatz. He said in a tweetBut to be honest, this is more childish name-calling than effective campaign tactics.
Calling someone a “kook” is not a substantive challenge to their policies or platform. It’s an ad hominem attack that does nothing to advance bipartisan debate.
So too does Trump and Vance refer to people as “laughin’ Kamala” and childless cat ladies.
Enough already, folks. This is a serious election, not a late-night monologue.
Both sides should blame the other when they disagree, even calling them a threat to democracy if that’s what you want to do.
Political attacks should be policy attacks — that is, actual criticism that informs voters, not just because you think your opponent has a harsh laugh or is “weird” or has “odd” tastes.
With less than 100 days until Election Day, we need to see something substantive.
At the ballot box, focus on hitting your opponents where it hurts: policies, not personalities.





