The halls of Congress, already strained by the bitter gridlock of a weeks-long government shutdown, became the backdrop for a stunning political explosion on Friday. House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries unleashed a verbal broadside against White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt, labeling her “sick,” “demented,” and a “stone-cold liar” in one of the most personal and severe condemnations of a sitting press secretary in recent memory.
The confrontation signals a new, toxic low in political discourse, moving beyond policy disagreements and into direct accusations of fueling societal hatred.
The firestorm was ignited by Leavitt, the 28-year-old press secretary, during a Fox appearance on Thursday. Speaking from outside the White House, Leavitt made the incendiary claim that the Democratic party’s base is composed of “Hamas terrorists, illegal aliens, and violent criminals.”
The remark, lumping mainstream voters with a designated terrorist organization, was a political grenade. On Friday, Jeffries, the 55-year-old New York Democrat, picked it up and threw it right back.
Speaking to reporters at the U.S. Capitol, Jeffries did not mince words. “You got Karoline Leavitt, who’s sick. She’s outta control,” Jeffries said, his voice measured but firm. “And I’m not sure whether she’s just demented, ignorant, a stone-cold liar, or all of the above.”
For the leader of the opposition party to publicly question the mental state and basic honesty of the president’s chief spokesperson is a dramatic escalation. But Jeffries argued that Leavitt’s rhetoric was not an isolated gaffe. He framed it as a symptom of a dangerous and growing trend of extremism on the right, one that he believes is fostering real-world violence.
“We’ve already seen a rise in political violence and hatred in America,” Jeffries stated, drawing a direct line from Leavitt’s comments to other disturbing incidents. He specifically cited the recent discovery of a swastika flag inside the office of Rep. Dave Taylor, a staunch Trump ally, as well as an explosive leak of thousands of racist and antisemitic messages from a Young Republicans group chat.
“You’ve got young Republicans engaging in the most anti-Semitic and racist speech possible, like this is apparently who many of these people are,” Jeffries said.
His point was clear: Leavitt’s words from the White House lectern are not just “politics”; they are, in his view, providing cover and validation for the darkest elements of the political fringe.
This entire verbal war is raging while the federal government remains shuttered. The shutdown, which began on October 1, is poised to stretch into a fourth week. Hundreds of thousands of federal workers are either furloughed or working without pay. The contrast between the critical, real-world consequences of the shutdown and the “sick” and “demented” name-calling in Washington could not be more stark.
Jeffries seized on this disconnect. “This is what the American people are getting from the Trump administration in the middle of a shutdown,” he said. “The notion that an official White House spokesperson would say that the Democratic Party consists of terrorist violent criminals and undocumented immigrants—this makes no sense.”
He concluded with a broad condemnation of the administration’s entire approach, alluding to the leaked Republican messages. “They are ripping the sheets off in plain view of the American people—their words, their actions revealing themselves in so many different ways,” he said. “So their actions continue to speak for themselves, which is why they’re on the wrong side of public sentiment.”
The White House has not yet issued a formal response to Jeffries’ blistering attack. But the battle lines have been drawn. This is no longer a debate over spending bills or policy riders. It has become a raw, public fight over the character of the administration itself, with one side accusing the other of being not just wrong, but dangerously and fundamentally “sick.”