Kamala Harris Compared to Classic Cartoon Character After Taking Her Fake Accent Too Far

In a recent ‍Labor Day speech in Detroit, Vice ⁢President Kamala Harris drew attention for her sudden ​adoption of a Southern accent, which some critics⁤ labeled as “transparently fake.” This‍ prompted‍ comparisons to Foghorn Leghorn, a fictional rooster character known for his loud‌ and exaggerated speaking⁣ style from the ⁤”Looney Tunes”‌ cartoons. Social media users ‌mocked Harris, with some claiming her rhetoric ⁢was embarrassing and devoid of genuine humor. Critics ⁣noted that her attempt⁢ to connect with voters through⁤ artificial authenticity fell flat, lacking‍ substantial policy discussions during⁣ her campaign. Harris faces significant challenges in her presidential run, relying heavily ‍on celebrity endorsements⁢ while lacking concrete policy proposals. The ⁢juxtaposition between ⁤her performative speech style and the serious nature of her political aspirations has drawn ire from some quarters, suggesting her tactics may⁢ not resonate with‌ the American electorate.


It was enough to make Mel Blanc blush.

Vice President Kamala Harris, whose transparently fake” speaking styles have drawn public attention before, is back in the social media spotlight after a Labor Day speech in Detroit on Monday that featured a bellicose Southern drawl unusual in a figure who was born in Oakland, California, and spent much of her teen years in Montreal, Canada.

And comparisons to a classic cartoon character were inevitable.

“Kamala Harris turned into Foghorn Leghorn,” one conservative social media user commenter wrote in post on X.

Foghorn Leghorn is the loudmouthed but likeable rooster from the “Looney Tunes” franchise originally voiced by the master of cartoon comedy Mel Blanc.

He’s boastful but funny, given to over-the-top rhetoric and hyperbolic similes that play perfectly in an animated universe where the only thing that matters is a few brief moments of entertainment.

Harris is boastful, of course, but she isn’t funny — at least not in any kind of way that’s good for the American people. And she’s running for the presidency of the United States, which matters a good deal more than a few laughs at a Warner Bros. cartoon.

And her latest attempt to appeal to voters with transparently fake “authenticity” was a lightning rod for bad reviews.

Elsa Kurt, a conservative comedian and author, hit it perfectly:

Some even took offense on Leghorn’s behalf.

Blanc, who died in 1989, was an entertainer’s entertainer — the voice behind iconic cartoon figures like Bugs Bunny, Porky Pig and Woody Woodpecker wasn’t political in public (so different from contemporary celebrities). In his New York Times obituary, the only mention of politics is an honorary position as mayor of Pacific Palisades, California.

But the comparisons in this case are fitting.

The current vice president the face of a cartoon campaign, one without any foundation other than she’s not Joe Biden — the president defenestrated by his own party.

And she’s not Donald Trump — the former president who retains the loyalty of tens of millions of Americans for his first tenure in office and is a serious threat to Democrats for the loyalties of blacks and Hispanics who benefited from his administration.

Against that, Harris has the marshaled forces of the establishment media (don’t expect to see the Kamala Harris-Foghorn Leghorn comparisons on the evening news), Hollywood celebrities, and pretty much every upper-crust aspect of American — and Western — society.

She’s heavy on big-name endorsements, light on policy or any kind of concrete statement about the destruction her administration promises for the American economy, its foreign policy, and the government’s responsibilities to American citizens and in the world.

The best she can offer is fake laughter, buffoonish assurances assurances, and fake accents.

And she’s got 62 days left to keep fooling American voters.






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