Whoopi Goldberg raises his eyebrows again on The View – this time for remarks inspired by the criminal case against former President Donald Trump.
The co-hosts of the long-running daytime talk show discussed Trump’s indictment on Tuesday, hours before his indictment in Manhattan.
Trump, 76, pleaded not guilty to 34 counts of falsifying business records.
Goldberg, 67, began the conversation by asking her colleagues, “How are you feeling about the historic day? You realize, it’s sad, but I’m glad something is happening.
“It is not sad. What’s sad? Joy Behar, 80, spat quickly.
“Well, I’m sad that on this [it is] American president,” Goldberg reasoned.
“But the fact that he’s being called in for questioning, etc., and being charged because he committed certain crimes, is not sad, that’s American justice,” continued Behar.
“It’s the first time in our lives and I do not think any of us could ever imagine it,” Goldberg added, to which Sunny Hostin, 54, replied, “I imagined it.”
“With him, not… with other presidents,” Goldberg explained.
The Post contacted The View for comment.
Goldberg made several gaffes on the show.
On March 15, Goldberg, who recently removed his glasses, apologized for using a racial slur on the show during a discussion about Trump and Stormy Daniels, referring to “individuals who still consider he one way or the other got gy-d in the election.”
“You realize, whenever you’re at a certain age, you utilize words that you already know out of your childhood or that you remember, and that’s what I did today – and I shouldn’t,” Goldberg said in the video tweeted by the official account of the series.
“I must have considered it a bit of longer before saying it, and I didn’t. I must have said cheated and I used a distinct word and I’m really sorry.”
“Gypsy” is commonly used to explain Roma, while the word Goldberg said known to hold negative connotations of being deceived, deceived and deceived.
In December, Goldberg apologized for stating that the Holocaust was “not about race” – a claim she had previously made and for which she apologized.