Top Kamala Harris campaign donor and surrogate Mark Cuban says “strong, intelligent women” do not support President Donald J. Trump, implying the women backing the 2024 Republican nominee are weak and stupid. Cuban’s remarks came during an appearance on ABC’s all-female-hosted talk show, The View.
“Donald Trump, you never see him around strong, intelligent women—ever. It’s just that simple,” Cuban claimed.
DISGUSTING: Top Kamala surrogate Mark Cuban says no “strong, intelligent women” support President Trump.
They’re now openly attacking the millions of strong, intelligent women fighting alongside President Trump every day to Make America Great Again.
Will @KamalaHQ disavow? pic.twitter.com/5sPihbzJ8t
— Trump War Room (@TrumpWarRoom) October 31, 2024
Cuban, a billionaire best known for selling several software companies and websites during the early ‘Dot Com Boom’ in the 1990s, has emerged as one of Vice President Harris’s most vocal supporters and campaign surrogates in recent months. Cuban, the owner of the NBA’s Dallas Mavericks, has appeared alongside Harris on the campaign trail and is one of her most aggressive allies in the media.
The disparaging remarks about women voting for Trump come on the heels of Joe Biden dismissing Trump supporters as “garbage” during a Tuesday night Harris campaign event with Voto Latino. Biden’s remarks were aired on CNN and drew immediate backlash from across the political spectrum—including among Democrats.
Governor Josh Shapiro (D-PA), responding to Biden’s insult of Trump voters, said: “I’m giving you my fresh reaction to it. I would never insult the good people of Pennsylvania or any Americans even if they chose to support a candidate that I didn’t support.” The Pennsylvania Democrat is considered a top contender for the party’s 2028 presidential nomination and was vetted by the Harris campaign as a potential 2024 running mate.
The denigration of female Trump supporters by Cuban—and Americans at large by Biden—could have serious implications in the final days of the 2024 presidential race. Recent polling suggests many battleground states could be decided by razor-thin margins.