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One musician’s all too serious backing of Vice President Kamala Harris while referring to his “privilege” found considerable mocking as Americans were left “living on a prayer.”

While childless cat lady Taylor Swift had thrown her weight behind the Democratic Party nominee as part of a post-debate narrative, other latecomers to the elitist endorsement game have come incrementally, perpetuating the idea that Harris was somehow gaining support.

Following Bruce Springsteen’s unsurprising backing of the leftist ticket the week prior, fellow Jersey boy Jon Bon Jovi released a music video for his song, “The People’s House” pitching it as representative of what he believes would come about during a hypothetical Harris-Walz administration.

“The People’s House is a song that celebrates this beautiful place that we call home, from sea to shining sea. The truth matters,” wrote Bon Jovi. “And the truth is on election day I’ll be voting for @KamalaHarris and @Tim_Walz because I believe in the power of we, not of me. I’ve written a song reminding us that out of many, we are still one.”

Lyrics in the song that spoke of a “house of love” included, “I wasn’t born a man of privilege, but I’m privileged just the same. No rain will wash away the stain, no truth can hide us from the shame until we all believe in change.”

The endorsement came as little surprise as commentator Catturd had called out over the summer when the campaign had relied on Megan Thee Stallion to fill a stadium for Harris, “Just so you know, like [former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton], Kamala Harris will continue to do rallies with bigger and bigger stars and free concerts to draw a crowd. (Because she can’t) Right before the election, it’ll probably be Taylor Swift.”

“They did the same thing with Hillary. She had Bon Jovi, Bruce Springsteen, Beyoncé, and on and on. When Hillary would speak, they had the crowd screaming so loud, you’d think Hillary was actually a popular rock star,” said Catturd. “It was all staged and fake just like it’s going to be with Kamala — both are cringe, fake, and extremely unlikeable.”

While Harris earned the support of the self-described “recovering Catholic,” the same day former President Donald Trump picked up an endorsement from NFL kicker Harrison Butker who, by contrast, felt no shame for his Catholic faith.

“I’m supporting the president that’s going to be the most pro-life president, and I think Donald Trump is the most pro-life president,” he’d told Fox News host Laura Ingraham while at an event showing his support for Missouri Sen. Josh Hawley (R).

Meanwhile, Bon Jovi, who had openly supported then-Massachusetts Sen. John Kerry, both former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton’s runs, as well as New Jersey Sen. Cory Booker’s bid for the White House before getting behind then-former Vice President Joe Biden in 2020, had reposted an image beside Second Gentleman Doug Emhoff who’d punned amid his own scandal, “It’s my wife, and it’s now or never. Election’s coming in November. Thank you for supporting Kamala, @JonBonJovi!”

Those who stood in opposition to the support of Harris were just as punny as they ripped the endorsement and the violent crime, open border crisis, and economic turmoil that it represented.

Kevin Haggerty
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