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Fox & friends' Ainsley Earhardt bristled Monday that Kamala Harris sounded too good during her appearance on the “Call Her Daddy” podcast, which she fears could lead to women voting for the Democratic presidential candidate.

“She was on this podcast (Call Her Daddy) over the weekend. Host) Alex Cooper and I listened to this, and if you don't know the issues, you really think, 'Okay, she's selling herself,'” Earhardt said during a segment on the Fox News morning talk show. “She talks about women's rights and how Donald Trump packed the court with all these conservative judges, and if you're a woman listening to this podcast and you don't know how progressive she is, maybe you'll vote for her.”

Harris used her appearance on the wildly popular podcast to denounce Trump's recent bizarre claim that he is a “protector of women” and his Vice President JD Vance's comments about women without biological children.

She also focused on Trump's claim that women “wouldn't think about abortion” if he were re-elected.

“So he who, as president, hand-selected three members of the Supreme Court of the United States with the intent that they would remove protections from… Roe v. Wadeand they did exactly what he intended,” Harris told Cooper. “So this is the same guy who’s saying this now?”

Some fans of the podcast criticized Cooper on social media, comparing the episode to “propaganda” for the Democratic Party and noting that there were no conversations about the impact of Hurricane Helene.

Lucky for Earhardt and Fox & friendsHer guest during the segment was conveniently a millennial Republican strategist, Katie Frost, who was happy to bash Harris. She claimed that Harris “changes her positions every day” and accused Harris of pandering to the podcast's demographic — Harris has long been pro-choice and did not make statements that deviated from her previous positions on “Call Her Daddy.” .

Frost added that “this doesn't work for me as a young woman” and that Harris' campaign “doesn't work for a lot of my friends.”

Regardless of who a person's friends are, the vice president has gained a decisive edge among young and female voters.

A recent poll from the Harvard Kennedy School's Institute of Politics found Harris with a 31-point lead over the former president among young voters economistThe /YouGov poll released last week showed a 10-point lead among women.

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