‘Wow’: Karoline Leavitt’s Blistering Remarks Spark Outrage as ‘The View’ Takes Aim at Her Millionaire Husband in Savage On-Air Takedown

Karoline Leavitt has never been shy about going after Democrats, the media, or anyone else on President Donald Trump’s list.

Last week, she went after Gen Z.

According to the mother of two, the people she listened to N’SYNC with in middle school, went to prom with, and played against as a student-athlete are letting America down.

Karoline Leavitt’s comments about Gen-Z got her in hot water following a brutal takedown of her marriage to her 60-year-old husband, Nicholas Riccio. (Photo: @karolineleavitt/Instagram)

It didn’t take long for “The View” to go after her.

The White House press secretary sat down with Fox News host Jesse Watters on “Primetime” on July 2 and torched Gen Z on national television.

“This generation, my generation, I hate to say it, Gen Z and those younger than me have been raised with just silver spoons in their mouths,” she said.

Leavitt added that her peers are used to “getting everything handed to them.”

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When Watters pushed on whether it was simple laziness, Leavitt didn’t blink.

“It’s laziness, and it’s liberal indoctrination,” she said.

“The View” hosts watched the clip and did not hold back. Joy Behar led with one word: “Gross.”

Behar then pivoted straight to Leavitt’s personal life, pointing to her marriage to millionaire New Hampshire real estate developer Nicholas Riccio, who is more than twice her age.

“She has all these things…got an education. She married a rich guy, so talk about a DEI hire,” Behar said.

Sunny Hostin backed her up, arguing that Leavitt’s own financial cushion makes her lecture ring hollow.

“It’s really rich for her to, at 28 years old, married to a 65-year-old — that’s her choice, he’s worth $61 million — so I’m not sure where she comes off saying Gen Zers are lazy,” Hostin said, noting that two-thirds of Gen Z is now in the workforce and 42 percent say they’re living paycheck to paycheck.

Alyssa Griffin tried to play peacemaker, noting Leavitt has “had a big career in politics and media” and made over a million dollars herself.

Behar wasn’t having it. “She’s 28 years old!” she shot back.

X lit up within hours.

“I cannot believe she Married a guy that’s old enough to be her grandfather,” one wrote.  

Others weren’t gentler.

“And let’s be clear: the minute Karoline gets bigger than she already is, he’s gonna kick her to the curb. You heard it here first,” someone predicted.

“Wow I agree with The View for the first time in my life,” another admitted.

“I would say marrying a man old enough to be her father is the lazy way out. Just my opinion,” one wrote.

Not everyone sided with the panel.

A business owner chimed, “I’m a business owner and I will tell you right now. Gen Z is lazy as f—k. They have no work ethic at all. They want to be paid for doing NOTHING.”

Others turned on the hosts themselves: “Nothing more humorous than old catty nags envying a younger woman who married rich. It’s transparent.” One Gen Zer clapped back at critics of the critics: “Why are they offended? They aren’t Gen Z. I am and can admit, WE ARE!”

And simply: “Jealousy is so unattractive.”

Leavitt tried to clean it up days later with a 404-word statement claiming she’d been quoted “out of context,” insisting “many Gen Z Americans are hardworking, entrepreneurial, and deeply patriotic.” Critics called the walk-back pointless.

So why is “DEI hire” even the insult of choice? Because Trump made it one.

On January 21, 2025, he signed Executive Order 14173, “Ending Illegal Discrimination and Restoring Merit-Based Opportunity,” which branded diversity, equity and inclusion programs a threat to “individual merit, aptitude, hard work, and determination” and ordered federal agencies to scrap them. The order also revoked LBJ’s 1965 affirmative action mandate for federal contractors.

Which is exactly why Behar’s jab landed the way it did.

Trump’s executive order was built on the idea that merit — not identity or connections — should determine who gets ahead.

Leavitt’s own rise, from Fox News intern to the youngest press secretary in history, is believed to have been fueled less by traditional credentials than by her fit as a young, camera-ready face for Trump’s message.

That contrast is what made the line sting and why so much of the blowback came from Gen Z, millennials, Gen X, and the boomers.

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