Conservatives for Property Rights Urge White House Support for Patent Reform
Where's the Left's Outrage Over This Florida Shooting?
From Madison to Minneapolis: One Leftist's Mission to Stop ICE
Two Wisconsin Hospitals Halted 'Gender-Affirming Care' for Minors, but the Fight Isn't Ove...
Dilbert Creator Scott Adams Has Died at 68
Here's the Insane Reason a U.K. Asylum Seeker Was Spared Jail Despite Sex...
Trump to Iran: Help Is on the Way
Flashback: There Was a Time Democrats Were Okay With Separating Illegal Immigrant Families
Trump Administration Makes Another Big Move to Deport Somalis
Trump’s Leverage Doctrine
Supreme Court Hears Oral Arguments on Whether States Can Ban Men From Women’s...
Federal Reserve Chairman ‘Ignored’ DOJ, Pirro Says, Necessitating Criminal Probe
Iran Death Toll Tops 12,000 As Security Forces Begin to Slaughter Non-Protesting Civilians
If Bill Clinton Thought He Could Just Not Show Up for His House...
The December Inflation Report Is Here, and It's Good News
Tipsheet
Premium

It's Unbelievable, but Kamala Harris' March Madness Gaffe Got Worse

AP Photo/Stephanie Scarbrough

Vice President Kamala Harris is probably relieved that the NCAA tournaments are over because now her horrendous gaffe can be buried. I don’t know what was going through the vice president’s head, but she made a laughable falsehood about the women’s tournament on television.

In trying to make something historic, Harris claimed wrongly that women’s teams weren’t allowed to have brackets. That remark was quickly debunked, as Barack Obama always drew two brackets. And her husband had one in 2021—she even tweeted about it. It makes Harris’ posts about her bracket-making and the media touting her as a gal who “knows ball” look even more ridiculous. 

Once again, Harris proves she is Biden’s best 25th Amendment insurance policy. 

South Carolina capped off an undefeated season for the women's teams, besting the Iowa Hawkeyes and its star Caitlin Clark, 87-75, in what was probably the most-watched national championship game for the women’s tournament ever. With the men, UConn coach Dan Hurley and his Huskies won the big dance again, going back-to-back over Purdue in a game that got quickly out of hand for the Boilermakers just minutes into the second half. 

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement