Kamala Harris tells MAGA hecklers crashing Wisconsin rally to 'go to smaller one down the street'

During a rally in Wisconsin on Thursday night, Kamala Harris told a group of MAGA hecklers who crashed the event that they likely meant to attend "the smaller one down the street" instead

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Kamala Harris wittily clapped back at a group of MAGA hecklers who attended her rally in Wisconsin on Thursday night, telling them they likely meant to attend "the smaller one down the street." It's been a running joke in the Harris -Walz campaign that Donald Trump's rallies are not only "weird" but don't pull a lot of people, and those who do attend them leave after a while because they tire of listening to their fearless orange leader babble on. When she noticed the group of hecklers, who began shouting after she started blasting the former president for appointing three Supreme Court justices who went on to ensure the overturning of Roe v.

Wade, which guaranteed the right to an abortion across the nation, through the historic and controversial Dobbs decision, she immediately pointed them out to the large crowd that had gathered for her at a venue in La Crosse. Kamala Harris lays policies bare in fiery first Fox News interview against 'hostile' host Brett Baier Donald Trump calls himself 'father of IVF' in Fox News town hall focused on women’s issues "Oh, you guys are at the wrong rally," she said, waving at the MAGA hecklers and smiling. "I think you meant to go to the smaller one down the street.



" That garnered chuckles from the crowd, which began to roar at her words. "Come on," she concluded, shaking her head in disbelief at the hecklers as she herself laughed with the cheering crowd. It's not clear what happened next, whether the hecklers were escorted out or allowed to stay, but Harris went on with her rally.

Her campaign later posted a clip of the event, including several fire emojis as they captioned it simply with what she said in the video. Harris' stop in Wisconsin was one of many she made in recent days — with some still on the docket — in the state and in Michigan and Pennsylvania, two other integral swing states ahead of the November election. Click here to follow the Mirror US on Google News to stay up to date with all the latest news, sports and entertainment stories.

An expert previously told TheMirror.com that whoever wins Pennsylvania is likely to win the entire election, and that same expert later said that if Harris wins Michigan, she's likely to also win Pennsylvania and Wisconsin, giving her the necessary boost to 270 Electoral College votes she needs to win the election. Wisconsin was once known as part of the "Blue Wall," a set of approximately 18 or so states that very consistently vote Democratically in elections.

Then, in 2016, Trump won the state by less than a point before Biden took it back by less than a point in 2020. Now, it's a purple state, and the outcome this year is uncertain. Harris is hoping to turn Wisconsin, Michigan and Pennsylvania into largely blue states, which the former two used to be.

Pennsylvania has always been a swing state in its voting history, flip-flopping at least every few cycles, but she's hoping to turn it into part of the Blue Wall. Polls from The Hill show Trump leading Harris in Wisconsin by less than a point, and if he wins the state this year, it would only be the second time in over 30 years that the state has turned red — the first being back in 2016 when Trump won it..