We support our Publishers and Content Creators. You can view this story on their website by CLICKING HERE.

So MSNBC’s former pretend-Republican Nicolle Wallace trotted over to NBC’s “Late Night with Seth Meyers” on Tuesday to boast about not voting for her then-boss John McCain (R-AZ) in the 2008 presidential election while at the same time having the gall to claim that the Donald Trump-era GOP is so horrific that Tuesday’s election “is the first nonpartisan” presidential election in her lifetime. 

Advertisement

Because of the cataclysmic consequences that would surely follow if the former president regained the White House, Wallace told equally TDS-riddled Myers that voting for Kamala Harris was “an emergency.” 

For whom? Leftists who support unrestricted abortion, irreversible “trans” mutilation of children, millions of illegal aliens continuing to surge across our southern border, tampons in boys’ bathrooms, ever-more wealth redistribution, and god knows what else if Harris wins.

Before we get to the nonsense, let me just say that I’m as disgusted by the smugness of left-wing elitists as much as the bilge they spew. Tuesday night for these two self-unaware hacks was no different.

Meyers kicked off the festivities as you’d expect, including mentioning that Wallace had worked for both McCain and George W. Bush as if to give her and her comments credibility outside of the leftist bubble (emphasis, mine):

You’ve worked on campaigns before. Bush in ’04, McCain in ’08. Certainly, I think when you lived through those times, you felt like the parties were very different, and yet, now you look back, and you realize there was a lot more they agreed on, certainly about the values in this country. Are you shaken by what you see at Madison Square Garden? Or have you just become immune to it?

Notice that Meyers gave zero examples of what Wallace saw at Madison Square Garden. 

She then kicked it up a notch or ten.

Advertisement

No, I’m so mad that I can still be devastated. … I want to not be devastated anymore, and I’m devastated that people were cheering for that stuff. Like, just gutted. Because I think it’s really hard to hate up close. You know, and I remember at the beginning of Twitter, I would tweet back at people, “Oh, you’d like me if you knew me.” How dumb am I? Like, most of them are Russian. But, I mean, lots of people here hate me too, Seth.

“Hate” is a strong word, Ms. Wallace. Do “lots of people” think you’re hopelessly biased? Of course they do, which is exactly what you are. Do “lots of people” laugh at you because of it? Yes — just like you laugh at conservatives when you’re spewing bile at them or their beliefs and policies they support.

“I was never scared before an election night, ever.”

Yep, she really said that.

But I was never scared before an election night, ever. You know, you — I worked on campaigns because I believed in the people that I worked for, except the one that I didn’t vote for. But I was never scared. And I think a lot of people in the pro-democracy — this is the first nonpartisan election in my lifetime.

Maybe ever. This is not a partisan election. I mean, this is — I mean, Kamala Harris has run a stellar campaign. And she spent time alongside the Cheneys. That’s like a joke that you guys couldn’t even make up ten years ago, right?

Advertisement

(After laughing out loud at Wallace’s pronouncement that Harris has run a “stellar campaign,” I composed myself, then continued writing.)

The MSNBC host never explained how or why she thinks the 2024 election is “nonpartisan.” I’ve covered more than a few presidential elections, and this one is the most partisan of them all. With the left’s effortless and continually throwing around charged accusations about “Hitler,” “Nazis,” “Stormtroopers,” “prison camps,” and the like, how much more partisan could they be? 

The ever-partisan Wallace summed up her scare-fest this way.

Like, I mean — and that’s where we are. And I’m a proud, hawkish, pro-democracy person. But I think the Trump thing — like, voting for Hillary Clinton was easy. Voting for Joe Biden was a pleasure. Voting for Kamala Harris feels like an emergency.

OK, I’m hollowing with laughter, again. I’m not sure I’m going to be able to stop for a while, so I’m out. 

For now.