The View has remained a staple on daytime television for nearly thirty years, despite all the daily outbursts of nonsense.
But The View was just ripped into turmoil that could change everything.
And Joy Behar lost it when this one co-host stepped off the narrative on The View.
Anti-Israeli protests cast dark shadow over the election
The View’s most recent token Republican to join the all female cast, Alyssa Farah Griffin, is as conservative as you would imagine.
Like Joe Scarborough at MSNBC, who claimed to be a Republican despite trashing Trump and conservatives every episode, Griffin is simply a RINO.
But every once in a while, Griffin will have moments of clarity where she will point out obvious and inarguable facts – usually regarding topics her co-hosts clearly don’t want to bring attention to.
On a recent broadcast of The View, she brought attention to the elephant in the room that her Democrat co-hosts had avoided thus far.
“So, I am in such a good mood today and I hate to raise this point, but I have to,” Griffin started, providing a trigger warning for her co-hosts.
She told them that she wanted to “ring some alarm bells.”
Griffin was worried about the anti-Israel riots and campus takeovers led by pro-Hamas Democrats at colleges across the country.
These students, who vote religiously for Democrats, are protesting President Joe Biden for standing with Israel, and not handing the war in Gaza over to the pro-terrorism Hamas government in Palestine.
Griffin’s concern is that these Democrat voters will refuse to vote on election day in protest, ultimately costing Biden his re-election.
“The election is seven months out. I don’t trust polling. I do agree with that,” began Griffin. “I think you can take it on aggregate and if the polls on aggregate are to be believed, Donald Trump may very well be President in seven months.”
“And here’s what I fear, my initial thought was him being on trial in a courtroom and not on the campaign trail was going to hurt him. I’m starting to think that it doesn’t…,” she added.
The View co-hosts stick their heads in the sand
Griffin’s thoughts explained how Biden should be much more worried about a Trump victory than he appears to be, and it was clear that the co-hosts did not want to hear about any of it.
“I think there’s a real reality right now that Joe Biden could pick up swing voters, he could pick up moderate Republicans in suburban–,” Griffin began after her staunch warning, before getting cut off.
That is when Joy Behar completely shut Griffin down by interrupting her saying, “why are you in a good mood again?”
“No, I’m sorry to bring the mood down with my take, but I’m very worried,” responded Griffin, before being cut off by Behar again.
“What’s the good mood about?” snapped Behar.
Griffin shot back, “I just happen to be in one.”
“What are you on some kind of drug or something?” Behar whined, making it clear that she was over the discussion.
Griffin was trying to make the point that, even if Biden succeeds with carrying suburban swing voters, he could still face defeat due to young voters staying home on election day in protest.
Polling data, as it stands, actually shows pretty fair odds for Trump despite whether or not these young voters come out.
In the most recent YouGov/Economist poll, Trump is ahead 44 to 43 percent.
But with independents, Trump is carrying a solid 41 percent compared to Biden’s 35 percent.
Not to mention key swing states such as Pennsylvania, North Carolina, Georgia, Michigan, Nevada and Arizona, where Trump is winning all seven according to polling by Bloomberg/Morning Consult and The Hill/Emerson.
Biden’s biggest problem is less about his failure to run further Left on the conflict in the Middle East, and more about the fact that he has been hammering working-class Americans with his radical open border policy and brutal levels of inflation.