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Furious argument explodes on CNN after panelist flagged Kevin O’Leary’s old age during foul-mouthed fight about politics

A CNN segment went off the rails after a progressive panelist took issue with Shark Tank star Kevin O’Leary’s tip to ‘get over it’ in regard to a landmark Supreme Court ruling.

The Monday ruling from the court cleared the way for Alabama to revert back to a congressional map that has one majority-black district.

O’Leary, 71, said citizens ‘should take confidence in’ the precedent set by the decision and that ‘at the end of the day, the state decides’ on Monday’s NewsNight. ‘It’s in the Constitution. Get over it,’ O’Leary continued. 

Political commentator Bakari Sellers saw things differently. He argued that pushing back against the status quo was inherently American.

‘The problem with that sentiment is that you were born in 1954,’ Sellers, 41, said. He called attention to the historic Supreme Court decision reached during Brown v. Board of Education that year.

‘I remember,’ O’Leary said – to which Sellers maintained, ‘you were like two months old.’

‘You’re going to drill back to ’54?’ O’Leary, at this point, asked. Sellers pointed out how Brown v. Board of Education itself overturned 1896’s Plessy v. Ferguson.   

And your point is? Bring it. Bring it. Bring it,’ O’Leary asked. Host Abby Phillip had to call a quick halt to the conversation due to expletives in the exchange that ensued. 

CNN Political Commentator Bakari Sellers took on Shark Tank’s Kevin O’Leary during a hectic edition of NewsNight on Monday

Host Abby Phillip had to call a halt to the conversation due to the exchange that followed

Host Abby Phillip had to call a halt to the conversation due to the exchange that followed

‘My point is that my mother was born in 1951. She desegregated schools. My father was shot in the Civil Rights Movement.’

‘And?’ O’Leary asked – leading Sellers accuse him of ‘being utterly disrespectful.’

‘Not at all,’ O’Leary said.  

Sellers swiftly told the investor that ‘there are people in this country who fought, died, and bled for the right to vote’.

‘Don’t be a d*ck,’ he said, before receiving a reprimand from Phillip for cursing.

‘The Constitution’s being upheld. You have a problem with that? You have a problem with the Constitution of the United States of America?’ O’Leary angrily asked.

Phillip, at this point, demanded both men put a cease to the full-on arguing.

‘I’m going to stop you because I just want everybody to reset with a modicum of respect at this table. Please stop, okay?’ Phillip said. Sellers proceeded to make his case following a brief lull.

'I'm going to stop you, because I just want everybody to reset with a modicum of respect at this table. Please stop, okay?' Phillip said at a point

‘I’m going to stop you, because I just want everybody to reset with a modicum of respect at this table. Please stop, okay?’ Phillip said at a point

‘I want you to understand that there’s a price that was paid for this right. There is a price that we uphold. And whether or not you value that,’ Sellers said, before being interrupted by O’Leary again. 

‘Where are you going with this?’ the businessman said, donning a ‘Utah National Security’ baseball cap for the appearance in reference to a proposed $100 billion data center in Utah to maintain the US’s competitiveness in AI he supports.

‘Whether or not you value that or not, there are people who bled, sweat, and died, and were in prison for access to the ballot box. And what we’re seeing,’ Sellers said, as the two men continued to talk over each other.

‘They still have access-,’ observed O’Leary.

Sellers said: ‘What we’re seeing throughout the South is that their voice, their vote, their representation, and people who have lived experiences to represent them are not being sent to Congress or where they need to go.’

Brown v. Board of Education found that separating US public school students by race was unconstitutional, after nearly 60 years of states operating under the ‘separate but equal’ precedent created by Plessy v. Ferguson.

The Supreme Court’s decision on Monday will likely remove a Democratic incumbent, Representative Shomari Figures, from office, detractors have said. 

'I want you to understand that there's a price that was paid for this right. There is a price that we uphold. And whether or not you value that,' Sellers said, after ordering O'Leary 'Don't be a d*ck'

‘I want you to understand that there’s a price that was paid for this right. There is a price that we uphold. And whether or not you value that,’ Sellers said, after ordering O’Leary ‘Don’t be a d*ck’

Figures, a black man, was elected in 2024. 

The year before, a group of black voters and civil rights organizations helped introduce a new congressional map on the basis that black voters in southern Alabama were previously being spread across three congressional districts unfairly.

Monday’s ruling sets up Alabama to use the old congressional map, which was blocked on the ground that it violated laws that prohibit racial discrimination in voting. 

Midterms to elect the country’s congressmen are being held this November. 

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