Joy Behar Admits Conservative Women Have Better White House Shot

Joy Behar just said the quiet part out loud: a conservative woman has a better shot at the White House than a liberal one. Yep — one of the loudest left-wing voices on TV finally admitted what the rest of America already knows.

On a recent episode of the “Behind the Table” podcast, the after-hours podcast Behar chairs with fellow far-left liberal Sonny Hostin, Behar discussed with The View’s executive producer Brain Teta, whether a woman could ever become president. Sunny, ever the down-trodden optimist, said she doesn’t think she’ll see it happen in her lifetime. Behar, for once, dropped a truth bomb: “It’s possible that somebody, like a Liz Cheney could win… I think maybe a conservative woman would win faster than a liberal.”

And just like that, Joy Behar accidentally set fire to the entire liberal narrative.

Even Teta chimed in, saying, “A lot of people think a conservative woman might win first.”

No kidding. Maybe because conservative women don’t try to out-woke each other with pronouns and TikTok policies. They talk about borders, crime, families — you know, real stuff. Issues that win elections.

Then, Hostin jumped in with her usual race-and-gender lecture. She claimed the U.S. is soaked in “systemic racism and misogyny,” and that’s why we haven’t had a female president yet. She actually said, “This is a country based on racism and slavery.” That’s right, folks — the same country that elected Barack Obama twice, and gave Kamala Harris the second-highest office in the land, is apparently still stuck in 1865 according to one of the top liberals in this country.

While it might seem contrarian to watch Sonny Hostin bash conservatism and conservative women, Sunny’s co-host, Alyssa Farah Griffin, does a great job at injecting some conservative reality into Behar and Hostin’s illiberal argument against Americans.

Watch the full interaction here.

If you can’t watch the video , it shows Hillary and Kamala didn’t lose because of sexism — they were just bad candidates. But of course, that didn’t sit well with Behar, who pointed to other countries like Mexico having female presidents, as if that proves her point.


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