Roseanne Barr Pushes To Be Donald Trump's Vice President

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Comedian Roseanne Barr has nominated herself to be in the running as Donald Trump's vice president if he were to win the Republican nomination.

Despite ongoing legal challenges, several polls have shown that Trump maintains a lead in some of the most critical battleground states ahead of the 2024 election.

A projection by Stack Data Strategy found Trump leading U.S. President Joe Biden in the Electoral College, even if Biden is favored to win the popular vote, flipping back states including Arizona, Georgia, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin in a head-to-head. In this scenario, Trump would win by a 292-246 margin.

When Ryan Fournier, a conservative activist and political commentator, posted to social media asking who Trump's vice president should be, Barr threw her hat in the ring.

"Who do you think President Trump should choose as his VP pick?" Fournier asked on X, formerly Twitter.

Barr replied: "Me."

The comedian previously revealed she had voted for Trump in the 2016 election and vowed to vote for him again should he win the Republican nomination. Newsweek reached out to a representative of Barr's for comment via email Thursday.

Various people took to the replies section to tell the comedian how much they loved the idea of her being vice president, including Andrew Tate's brother, Tristan Tate.

"This isn't actually a bad call. Trump Barr 2024? I'm in," the kickboxer wrote. Romania's anti-organized-crime agency has accused Tate and his brother Andrew of coercing six women into producing pornography through threatening "acts of physical violence and mental coercion." They were arrested along with two Romanian women and all four have denied wrongdoing.

"I'll go with Roseanne Barr or Tucker Carlson. Both of them would be outstanding. I would also love to have Roseanne as White House press secretary, she would be a beast!!!" someone else wrote.

Roseanne Barr and Donald Trump
Roseanne Barr (left) on February 14, 2023, in New York City and Republican presidential candidate former President Donald Trump (right) on November 11, 2023, in New Hampshire. Barr has said she would like to be... Steven Ferdman/Scott Eisen/Getty Images

"That would be EPIC," another person posted.

"Strangely I could get behind that," a fourth person commented.

"That would be amazingly fun!!!!" wrote another.

This isn't the first time that there have been talks of Barr taking on this position, as failed Arizona Republican gubernatorial candidate Kari Lake previously teased she wants Barr to be Trump's vice president pick. Lake praised Barr during an interview for the second episode of the comedian's eponymous show.

During the interview, Lake said: "I know that if President Trump needs a female vice president, I'm starting to think right now as I'm sitting here: Trump—Barr."

The statement was met with enthusiastic laughter from Barr who replied: "Well, you know, wherever I could be useful fellow and sister citizens. I have the time and I think I'm smart and I'm definitely committed to the survival of this representational government of, by and for the people, and I think that we can't let it disappear from the Earth because it won't ever come back."

While Barr has her supporters, she has also found herself under fire for a variety of incidents over the years.

Barr was castigated in Hollywood in 2018 after she tweeted that the "Muslim brotherhood and planet of the apes had a baby," referring to Valerie Jarrett, who is Black, and was a senior adviser to former President Barack Obama.

The tweet was widely considered to be racist and led to her being fired from her television show Roseanne.

"I apologize to Valerie Jarrett and to all Americans," Barr later wrote. "I am truly sorry for making a bad joke about her politics and her looks. I should have known better. Forgive me—my joke was in bad taste."

She found herself in hot water again when she made controversial statements while appearing on the podcast Triggered with Donald Trump Jr. in October. During their conversation, she spoke candidly about being "canceled" and also discussed politics.

A snippet from the interview was posted on X, causing quite a stir when it shared her statement: "I don't think anything is going to wake up the Jews and the Blacks who vote Democrat. They're so severely mind controlled[...]I don't think they can get it."

One person said: "Wow, Rosanne thinks 'the Blacks and Jews are severely mind controlled.' Deep thoughts by a seemingly ignorant human."

Another shared: "Red flag when you include 'the' in front of a minority group."

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About the writer

Billie is a Newsweek Pop Culture and Entertainment Reporter based in London who has appeared online, in print and on radio. She has extensively covered pop culture, women's rights and lifestyle topics throughout her career and has interviewed numerous celebrities, including Jude Law, Billy Crystal and country singer Lainey Wilson. Originally from Sydney, Australia, Billie moved to London in 2019. She joined Newsweek in 2023 and has previously written for Stylist, Cosmopolitan, Popsugar, Metro.co.uk, The Mirror and Business Insider, just to name a few. She studied Media (Communications and Journalism) at the University of New South Wales. Languages: English. You can get in touch with Billie by emailing b.schwabdunn@newsweek.com, and on X at @billie_sd.


Billie is a Newsweek Pop Culture and Entertainment Reporter based in London who has appeared online, in print and on ... Read more