John McCain’s daughter, Meghan, had a bad case of the sorry-for-herself blues last night on Twitter. Unfortunately for her, nobody cared. “Twitter comments and chatter are hurting me today for. ‘The View’ star Meghan McCain described how Twitter comments make an impact. The View co-host is the lone Republican on the daytime talk show, where she often shares opinions that are not. Meghan Marguerite McCain (born October 23, 1984) is an American conservative columnist, author, and television personality. She has worked for ABC News, Fox News, and MSNBC. The daughter of politician John McCain and businesswoman Cindy McCain, she has been a public figure for much of her life, first appearing at the 1996 Republican.
Today on The View, Meghan McCain called on President Joe Biden to replace Dr. Anthony Fauci and complained that someone like her, a co-host on The View, should know when and where she'd be able to get a COVID-19 vaccine. Dr. Fauci was a guest on the show and remained vague about things like when things would get back to 'normal' and how long Americans would have to wear masks. McCain wasn't quiet about her opinions or her privilege.
'The fact that I, Meghan McCain, co-host of The View, don't know when or how I will be able to get a vaccine because the rollout for my age range and my health is so nebulous. I have no idea when and how I get it,' she said. 'I want to get it. If you call me at three o'clock in the morning, I will go any place at any time to get it.'
She also suggested that Dr. Biden doesn't 'understand science' and that the messaging surrounding coronavirus has been too mixed-up.
'I think we need to have more people giving more opinions and honestly quite frankly, I think the Biden administration should remove him and put someone else in place that does understand science or can talk like these other countries about how we can be more like these other places that are doing this successfully,' she finished.
Twitter users were quick to call her out, calling her clueless, oblivious, disrespectful, and plenty of other things. Before the segment went to a commercial break, McCain seemed to see the backlash coming for her.
'I know what I'm saying is controversial, I really do,' she said. 'But I'm not a phony and I'm not going to come on air and say something different than what I'm saying privately.'
I’ve been volunteering at largest vaccine site in AZ, where I grew up (as did Meghan McCain). I’ve seen patients in BMWs on way to golf and others in beaters coming off a night shift. All are treated the same.
What I view as a great equalizer is what Meghan view as “a disaster.” https://t.co/HqEdcRiUx9
— Lucy Caldwell (@lucymcaldwell) February 22, 2021Meghan McCain really just said “The fact that I, Meghan McCain, COHOST OF THE VIEW, don’t know when or how I will be able to get a vaccine” 🥴🥴🥴 Girl pic.twitter.com/aPuIm0Zy6H
— blaire erskine (@blaireerskine) February 22, 2021parents: make sure your children understand they're not the center of the universe, so they don't grow up to be Meghan McCain
— Jeff Tiedrich (@itsJeffTiedrich) February 22, 2021I, like many Americans, don’t know when or how I will be able to get a vaccine
Meghan Mccain Twitter Instagram
But as for Meghan McCain, Princess of Arizona, ...don’t they know who she is?!
— Lindy Li (@lindyli) February 22, 2021The only time I hear about The View is when Meghan McCain says something dumb.
— drew olanoff (@yoda) February 22, 2021Meghan McCain today pic.twitter.com/g50gYDscna
— Adan the Abstraction (@manicsocratic) February 22, 2021Even the usually tame account Rate My Skype Room offered a scathing comment.
Meghan Mccain Twitter
Well lit. Nice flowers. Poster child for Entitlement. Wants her vaccine delivered by Dr Fauci now. Doesn’t he know who she is? 0/10 @MeghanMcCainpic.twitter.com/fAC5FHlz6S
— Room Rater (@ratemyskyperoom) February 22, 2021Meghan Mccain Twitter Border
Today, CNN reported that 500,000 people have died from the coronavirus in America. The outlet added that 44.1 million Americans have gotten at least one dose of the two-dose Pfizer-BioNTech and Moderna vaccines, about 5.9% of the U.S. population. Thankfully, daily deaths saw a 24% decline during the past week, according to data collected by Johns Hopkins University