A self-proclaimed liberal “mean girl,” Suzanne Lambert, has ignited controversy with her ruthless trolling of Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt and her older husband, Nicholas Riccio, over their 32-year age gap. Lambert, who boldly likes her political style to Regina George from the cult classic film “Mean Girls,” has already taken aim at Leavitt’s makeup and fashion choices, while also targeting the appearance of Rep. Nancy Mace (R-South Carolina).
Recently, Lambert escalated her attacks in a provocative TikTok video, insinuating that Leavitt harbors a desire to cut Medicaid for the elderly. With a smirk, she pointed out that 59-year-old Riccio will soon be eligible for the program designed for low-income seniors, suggesting that Leavitt’s motives might not be as altruistic as they seem. The implication was clear: Lambert is not just criticizing policies but is also questioning Leavitt’s personal life in a way that many found distasteful.
In response to Lambert’s biting commentary, Karoline Leavitt declared she would not let the matter go unchallenged. With a fierce determination, she vowed to address the personal attacks head-on, stating that such cruelty would not deter her from her duties. Leavitt’s reaction has only fueled the flames of this escalating feud, drawing attention to the often brutal landscape of political discourse, where personal lives become fodder for public ridicule.
‘Seeing as she’s literally the White House‘s most vocal supporter of stripping Medicaid rights from senior citizens and her husband is almost a senior citizen himself, it’s really clear what she’s trying to do and I admire her transparency,’ Lambert said in a video.
Suzanne Lambert (pictured during a Monday interview on CBS) has carved out a niche for herself as a ‘mean girl’ liberal
Leavitt is pictured with her husband Nicholas Riccio, 59, and their young son. There is a 32 year age gap between the pair
Leavitt married her husband, real estate developer Nicholas Riccio, in December 2023.
They welcomed their first baby in July, and she famously returned to work for President Trump days later.
She has said of her husband in the past: ‘He doesn’t have social media and he’s an introvert (complete opposite of me).
‘I respect his privacy on here—but he’s my number one fan, the best dad, and just the best man I’ve ever met.’
The pair are understood to have been introduced through friends.
Lambert, who is based in Arlington, Virginia, catapulted herself into social media infamy with a video on November 11, days after Trump defeated Vice President Kamala Harris in the 2024 election.
She called on liberals and Democrats to get meaner in the second era of Trump, suggesting that the ‘when they go low, we go high’ attitude of people like Michelle Obama hasn’t been effective in beating back the rising tide of conservatism.
‘Do you know how many reformed mean girls have been waiting for this exact moment in time? I’m an ex-SEC sorority girl, okay? I have three brothers and an Irish catholic mother. I know mean,’ she said, while dressed in a fur shawl.
Karoline Leavitt unsure if Trump federal freeze will impact Medicaid
Lambert has also gone after Brittany Danielle (left standing next to Fox News White House Correspondent Peter Doocy) who did Leavitt’s makeup on her first day as press secretary
Pictured: This is how Danielle dressed Leavitt up for her first time battling it out with reporters
‘Some of us were meant to be Regina George liberals. Lucille Bluth, Principal Ava Coleman liberals,’ she added.
Speaking to the more well-mannered liberals in the movement, she said: ‘Y’all did it your way, and we’re doing it our way.’
She has said she feels justified in being ‘mean’, citing her view that the right wing is chipping away at transgender rights and using DEI as a racist scapegoat for Americans’ problems.
‘Oh no, am I being mean to the people who want to erase my trans friends from existing on this Earth?’ she said in a video from Saturday. ‘Oh no, am I being mean to the people who are foaming at the mouth to say the N-word, so instead they just say DEI?’
Leavitt has consistently been one of Lambert’s favorite targets.
In a video again attacking her for Trump’s federal funding freeze, she said Leavitt’s makeup made her look ‘jaundiced.’
Lambert also trashed her hairstyle, saying: ‘The zigzag part in her hair is also certainly a choice. I actually had the same one in my fifth grade school photo, you know, before my pre-frontal cortex was done developing.’
Lambert’s insults extended to Leavitt’s makeup artist Brittany Danielle, who has crafted the looks of various Republican women.
Danielle allegedly blocked Lambert on Instagram after a video of her criticizing all of her makeup jobs went viral. DailyMail.com approached Danielle for further comment.
Another Republican that’s frequently in Lambert’s crosshairs is Nancy Mace, who was elected to Congress in 2021.
Shortly after Trump’s win, Mace introduced a congressional resolution to ban transgender women from using women’s bathrooms in Congress, something House Speaker Mike Johnson approved.
The move from Mace came after Sarah McBride became the first trans woman to be elected to Congress this year.
Republican Rep. Nancy Mace from South Carolina is one of Lambert’s frequent targets because of her views on transgender people
Mace’s trans bathroom ban came after Sarah McBride became the first trans woman to be elected to Congress
Nancy Mace and MTG post bathroom signs designating genders
Lambert, a frequent defender of trans rights, took this as an opportunity to disparage the 47-year-old’s looks.
‘Hey this is for Congresswoman Nancy Mace. If you’re not Nancy Mace, then your nose contour probably doesn’t look like grill marks on a piece of chicken,’ she said on December 2023.
She continued: ‘Wanted to check in girl, I know you’re super busy hanging out in public bathrooms because it’s all you seem to really care or think about.’
In an interview with The Washington Post, Lambert revealed she wasn’t always this firebrand liberal. In fact, while she was growing up in Georgia, she was the president of her Young Republicans club in high school.
And in college, she campaigned for Mitt Romney, who ran for president in 2012 against Barack Obama.
By the time Trump ran in 2016, she told the Post she couldn’t vote for him. Plus around that same time, she dealt with an unplanned pregnancy that turned her into a supporter of abortion rights.
Lambert did her first television news hit on Monday, joining CBS’s Major Garrett to expand on how reproductive rights prompted her political heel turn.
‘When you find yourself in that situation, maybe unexpectedly, it all of a sudden shifts your belief on something you may have held your entire life,’ Lambert said. ‘All it takes is one moment, really, to make you open your eyes and think, “oh, this is what people were talking about when they said access is so important.”‘
Lambert appears on CBS with correspondent Major Garrett to talk about her political heel turn and her approach to attacking Republicans
Lambert also defended herself from people in the comments of her videos who say she shouldn’t go after how women look, implying the criticism was a sexist double standard.
‘Men do it all the time. Look at Steve Colbert. Look at Jon Stewart. They’ve been doing this, right? Humor has been a cornerstone of politics for the entirety of our history,’ she said.
‘You don’t see people in Jon Stewart’s comments telling him to be nice,’ she added. ‘They don’t tell them to be nice, so when it’s a woman doing it, people are like “whoa, whoa, whoa, this is really mean”, and I’m like, “yeah, that’s the point.”‘
Lambert’s rise to prominence mirrors the ascension of David Hogg, who became the vice chairman of the Democratic National Committee this weekend.
Like Lambert, Hogg is young, just 24, and unafraid to go after Republicans in a harsh manner.
Hogg has become a vocal gun-control activist after surviving the 2018 Parkland High School shooting.
In the years since, he has consistently advocated for an aggressive approach when it comes to fighting for the left’s ideals.
‘We have to stop being cowards—it’s time to be bold, aggressive, and to fight—just like we did after Parkland,’ Hogg wrote after being elected DNC vice chair.
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