Since Trump won the Electoral College and the popular vote less than a week ago, he announced some appointees to his Cabinet, one of whom is former U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement Director Tom Homan to be his border czar. The View discussed Homan and the strict border security policies he has promised to follow through with, including deporting illegal immigrants. Navarro mocked the Trump voters who “didn’t think it applied to them.”
“So in the last few days, I got a call from a couple of people, friends of mine, people very close to me in Miami, big Trumpers, who are worried now about what’s going to happen to their undocumented nannies that help them raise their children,” Navarro said. “So I told them that I suggested they learn how to clean their kids’ a**.”
Navarro’s comments were met with applause from the audience and laughs from her co-hosts.
“People who think that what Trump was saying, the racial slurs, that the threats on immigration, the department of education, all the things Trump was saying … was just rhetoric, hyperbole, they’re about to find out,” Navarro said.
For herself, Navarro does not have children despite giving in vitro fertilization a try at the age of 50.
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Child care became an increasingly important topic to voters throughout the election season, even being floated as a question during Trump’s debate with President Joe Biden, to which neither candidate offered a strong answer. In Florida, where Navarro resides, the annual cost of child care is just over $7,000, which is the 44th lowest cost out of all the states.
Still, Navarro’s resident county of Miami-Dade elected Trump 55%-43%. Notably, Sen. Rick Scott (R-FL) also won the county, and three of the four House members who represent the county were also Republican.