Joe Biden's campaign chief praised the Democrat's ability to connect with voters on a pledge to heal America's polarized politics, but in the next breath, she strayed from the unity theme, calling Republicans a “bunch of f***ers.”
“The president-elect was able to connect with people over this sense of unity,” campaign manager Jen O'Malley Dillon said in a Glamour Magazine interview that was published on Tuesday, noting that people had mocked him during the primaries for trying to work with Republicans.
She continued: “I'm not saying they're not a bunch of f***ers. Mitch McConnell is terrible. But this sense that you couldn't wish for that, you couldn't wish for the bipartisan ideal? He rejected that.”
Also on rt.com So much for ‘healing’... the Trump Accountability Project is just the start of massive discrimination against conservativesO’Malley Dillon's F-bomb follows a trend of Democrats condemning Republicans and calling for supporters of President Donald Trump to be punished, even as President-elect Biden speaks of unifying the country. She perhaps stands out by mingling the contradictory messages in the same statement.
The Biden aide, who last month was named deputy chief of staff in the incoming administration, went on to say that she agrees with Biden's message that the nation and its fractured political system need healing and efforts toward compromise.
Also on rt.com Don't believe messages about ‘olive branches’ and ‘moving forward’ from anti-Trump celebs & pols. They’re as hateful as ever“People want to see impact,” O'Malley Dillon said. “They want to see us moving in a path forward. They want to do their work, get paid a fair share, have time for themselves and their family, and see each other as neighbors. And this overhang of this negative, polarized electorate that politics has created is the thing that I think we can break down.”
Reaction to her mixed message was a reminder of how wide the political divide is. Blue-check liberals, such as lawyer Max Kennerly, writer Lynn Comella and life coach Michael Buckley, praised her condemnation of Republicans as accurate.
Republicans, such as Trump campaign aide Matt Wolking and Stacey Zinke-McKee, pointed out the irony of calling for unity with people while calling them a vulgar name.
“Team Biden pilots a new deal-making approach: Say you want bipartisanship with terrible f***ers,” Axios reporter Jonathan Swan tweeted.
Meanwhile, New York Times White House reporter Maggie Haberman focused on Dillon's “rare” and “unapologetic” comments about managing the responsibilities of motherhood around an intense job. She was then blasted with replies pointing to Republican women, such as Supreme Court Justice Amy Coney Barrett, doing the same thing.
“You can't just ignore conservative women because you don't agree with their politics,” Trump campaign aide Abigail Marone told Haberman.
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