Jesse Watters criticized a commercial that encouraged women to hide their vote for the upcoming election, suggesting that going against your spouse with your vote was like an affair.
He advertisementproduced by Vote Common Good, a nonprofit aimed at mobilizing religious voters, encouraging the wives of Donald Trump supporters to quietly vote for Kamala Harris.
Watters criticized the announcement on both The Five and his own show on Thursday, saying it would be “D-Day” if his second wife, Emma DiGiovine, pulled the lever for Harris.
“If I find out that Emma goes to the voting booth and pulls the lever for Harris, that’s the same as having an affair,” he said.
Even some of his fellow conservative cast members of The Five were laughing at their TV host, who chuckled when he finished the thought.
Jesse Watters criticized a commercial that encouraged women to hide their vote for the next election, suggesting that going against your spouse with your vote was like an affair
Watters criticized the announcement on both The Five and his own show on Thursday, saying it would be “D-Day” if his second wife, Emma DiGiovine (pictured right), pulled the lever for Harris.
Still, Watters pressed on: ‘That violates the sanctity of our marriage. What else are you hiding from me? What are you lying about?
‘Why would I do that and vote for Harris? Why would you say you were going to vote? If I surprised her and said, “I lied to you for the last four years.”
Jeannine Pirro confronted him about this: ‘Then you would admit that you would bully…’
Watters replied: ‘It’s over, Emma! That would be D-Day!’
The Fox host married DiGiovine in January 2020, after admitting to an affair with her that broke up his first marriage to Noelle in 2017.
Academy Award winner Julia Roberts’ announcement endorsing Harris has sparked a conservative backlash online, with some accusing it of undermining marital unity and creating distrust.
“In the only place in America where women still have the right to choose, you can vote however you want and no one will ever know,” Roberts says, as a woman hesitates before voting for Vice President Kamala Harris.
‘Did you make the right decision?’ her husband asks later. She responds, “Of course, honey,” implying that she voted for Harris.
The ad, produced by Vote Common Good, a nonprofit aimed at mobilizing religious voters, suggests that the wives of Trump supporters could safely vote for Harris.
Roberts concludes: “Remember: what happens in the cabin, stays in the cabin.” Vote for Harris-Walz.’
Critics of the ad accused the organization of encouraging deception between married couples.
The View’s Ana Navarro criticized Newt Gingrich after he criticized her husbands’ announcement for the upcoming US presidential election.
Gingrich, 81, criticized the ad, saying: ‘How do you run a country? where you walk around saying that wives should lie to their husbands, husbands Should they lie to their wives? What kind of totally amoral, corrupt and Democrats have a sick system developed?’ while Watters said his wife lying about her vote ‘is the same as having an affair.’
After watching clips of both men during Friday’s episode of The View, Navarro, 52, decided to weigh in, telling the panel: “It’s almost comical, if it weren’t so serious it would be comical, it’s people like Newt Gingrich saying we shouldn’t go around saying that wives should lie to their husbands or that husbands should lie to their wives… he cheated on his first and second wife.
With four days until Election Day, Donald Trump and Kamala Harris are back campaigning in swing states with the race still close to being decided.
DailyMail.com’s final poll on the 2024 campaign puts the Republican candidate three points ahead of Harris nationally.