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JD VANCE OBLITERATES JASMINE CROCKETT AFTER SHE CLAIMS BLACK AMERICANS REJECT GOP BECAUSE “WE JUST IS LIKE, Y’ALL RACIST”

PHOENIX, AZ — A simmering feud between the populist Right and the progressive Left erupted into a viral firestorm this week after Representative Jasmine Crockett (D-TX) made inflammatory comments generalizing Black voters and comparing the Republican Party to the Ku Klux Klan.

In a clip that has circulated widely, Crockett attempted to explain why, in her view, Black Americans do not support the GOP.

“Most Black people aren’t Republicans simply because we just is like, ‘Y’all racist,’”

Crockett said, affecting a distinct dialect. “I can’t hang out with the KKK and them. That’s really what it is… We just is like, ‘You racist.’” 

The remarks drew immediate backlash for both their sweeping generalizations and the perception that Crockett—a law school graduate and former public defender—was putting on a “character” to appeal to voters.

 

Vance’s “Fatal Question”

Vice President JD Vance, speaking at a turning Point USA event, did not let the comments slide. Instead of addressing the KKK comparison directly, Vance attacked the messenger, delivering a line that questioned the very essence of Crockett’s public identity.

Vance paused his speech, looked at the clip of Crockett, and asked the crowd a rhetorical question that cut through the noise:

“She went to law school. She’s a legislator. So I have to ask: Is this ‘street-girl’ persona of hers any more real than her nails?”

 

The crowd erupted. Vance continued, driving the point home: “Why does a highly educated woman feel the need to fake a dialect to talk to her own people? It’s because she thinks they aren’t smart enough to understand her real voice. That isn’t representation; that is mockery.”

 

“Blushing” Anger

The comment reportedly struck a nerve. Sources close to the Congresswoman describe her as furious, accusing Vance of employing “racist tropes” about Black women’s appearance. However, critics argue Vance’s “fatal question” exposed a deeper issue: the performative nature of modern politics.

By framing Crockett not as a crusader against racism, but as an inauthentic actor playing a role, Vance shifted the narrative from what she said to who she really is. For Crockett, whose brand relies on “keeping it real,” the accusation of being “fake” may be the hardest charge to shake.

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