Experts reveal their takeaways from the viral moment when Sen. Deb Fischer's husband, Bruce, appeared to deny the vice president's handshake.
"Black woman to Black woman, I recognize every single breath, facial expression, and physical reaction to what Kamala Harris is experiencing."
Geoff Duncan, the former lieutenant governor of Georgia who supported Kamala Harris in the presidential election, has been expelled from the state party, he announced on Tuesday. Along with booting Duncan,
Bruce Fischer accompanied his wife, first elected as a Senator for Nebraska in 2012, to the ceremony in Washington, D.C., on Friday and his refusal to shake hands with the vice president clearly surprised her as she oversaw the event, marking the beginning of the 119 th Congress.
Liberal netizens tore into Sen. Deb Fischer’s (R-Neb.) elderly husband Bruce for appearing to turn down Vice President Kamala Harris’ handshake last week, but viral footage that
Deb Fischer shook Harris’ hand after completing her oath and thanked the vice president. When Harris expressed congratulations to the senator’s husband, he offered a short “thank you” and then dropped his newly freed left hand and put it in his pants pocket, prompting a raised-eyebrows reaction from Harris.
A seemingly awkward moment at the swearing-in ceremony of US senators on Friday has become the talk of the town after Republican Senator Deb Fischer's husband appeared to refuse to shake Vice President Kamala Harris' hand.
The clip quickly sparked a kind of culture war on X, as both camps dug in with pro-MAGA influencers praising Bruce Fischer’s snub of Harris
Former President Jimmy Carter arrived at the U.S. Capitol to lie in state after a memorial service attended by his family, Vice President Kamala Harris, members of Congress and other officials.
The former lieutenant governor angered many in the Georgia GOP for his criticism of President-elect Donald Trump.
Unlike other frontline Democrats, Rep. Derek Tran flipped a GOP-held House as a proud Harris supporter. Across the country, vulnerable House Democrats ― and Democrats hoping to take over Republican House seats ― did their best to create distance with Vice President Kamala Harris ahead of the 2024 election.