'The View' co-hosts clash after Sunny Hostin attributes Trump win to racism and misogyny

'The stats are stats,' co-host Sunny Hostin repeatedly insisted

'The View' hosts clash over whether racism, sexism played role in Trump election victory

'The View' co-hosts Sunny Hostin and Alyssa Farah Griffin sparred over whether racism or sexism hurt Kamala Harris in her loss to President-elect Donald Trump.

"The View" co-hosts Alyssa Farah Griffin and Sunny Hostin clashed on Monday over the idea that President-elect Donald Trump beat Vice President Kamala Harris due to racism and misogyny in the U.S. 

"As a country, it’s very difficult for people to believe that racism and misogyny, they’re just alive and well. I think that we don’t want to think that about ourselves, our neighbors, our friends, but it’s – my lived experience tells me that it does still exist, even if your lived experience doesn’t tell that it exists and, you know, the facts support that," Hostin began, pointing to a graph that showed "a clear racial divide" in who voted for Trump as opposed to who voted for Harris.

Hostin, who has disparaged voters who cast their support for the president-elect, has also suggested the Latino community supported Trump due to misogyny and sexism.

"It’s very clear. It’s not only clear by race, but it’s also clear by education, and so the notion somehow that that is not true – this is by education. Those who attended a college voted for her at a higher degree than those that didn’t," Hostin continued. "I’ve said that before, and there was so much backlash because I think it’s an uncomfortable, inconvenient truth about this country."

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Sunny Hostin and Alyssa Farah Griffin

Sunny Hostin and Alyssa Farah Griffin clashed on Monday after Hostin said Donald Trump won because of racism and misogyny. (Screenshot/ABC)

Griffin argued that people didn't vote for Trump because of racism and misogyny and said they voted for him because they wanted a good life and to be able to provide for their families. 

"Why did Black people vote for her? Black people are one of the poorest demographics in this country, they voted for Kamala Harris," Hostin responded.

"If you think the vast majority of this country voted because of racism and misogyny, you’re missing it," Griffin said. "A lot of my family doesn't have college degrees."

Hostin shot back, "the stats are the stats." 

"It doesn't say, 'I'm White, I voted for Trump because of racism,'" Griffin said before Hostin insisted, "you can't dissect the two." 

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"Yes, you can!" Griffin said. "There's a lot more to this country."

Sara Haines said that Hostin's argument was valid, but it wasn't the only reason why Trump won. Hostin noted that she was not arguing it was the only reason. 

"The backlash is when people hang their hat on that being the only reason, any criticism of Vice President Harris must be because she’s a woman or she’s Black. I voted for Hillary Clinton, not because she was a woman, she was the most qualified. I voted for Vice President Kamala Harris because more of my values fell in line with what she stood for. So all of that can be true," Haines said. 

The co-hosts were responding to comedian Bill Maher, who took aim at the Democratic Party during his show on Friday amid Harris' loss to Trump.

Bill Maher

"Real Time" host Bill Maher said the Democratic Party needs to look in the mirror following its Election Day defeat. (Screenshot/HBO)

"What a shocker that the people who see everything through the lens of race and sex see their election loss as a result of racism and sexism. Yes, if only we weren't so irredeemably unenlightened, we would have elected a Black president by now. Oh what, we did?" Maher said. "And sexism? Hillary got 3 million more votes than Trump… Democrats run for office as if the voters don't live here, as if they don't go to the grocery store and Starbucks and the office, but they do. They live here, and they actually see women and people of color, and it doesn't look like some patriarchal racist nightmare."

Co-host Ana Navarro responded directly to Maher. 

"I would say to Bill Maher, who I like, whose show I have been on several times, that maybe, just maybe, when you live life as a woman and as a woman of color, you feel it and you know it a little bit more than a White man does in America," said. "He says that folks see everything through the lens of racism and sexism. Not everything, but if you’re not seeing racism and sexism in America, then you need to clean your lenses."

Hanna Panreck is an associate editor at Fox News.

Authored by Hanna Panreck via FoxNews November 18th 2024