WATCH: Jasmine Crockett actually voices ‘[bleep] you’ to Supreme Court
Congresswoman Jasmine Crockett, who probably soon will be a former U.S. representative from Texas, recently announced she was not running for re-election to her House seat, but instead would go for a U.S. Senate seat from the Lone Star state.
Likely her decision was pushed by the fact Texas has realigned its congressional districts, essentially disassembly Crockett’s district and making her re-election much less likely.
The redistricting is all part of a Republican campaign heading into the midterms to try to make Congress more representative of America, and realign their U.S. representatives reflective of their voting population.
Democrats have used the same scheming for years, and in fact, they’ve gone so far in California that while more than a third of the voters identify as Republican, only a tiny fraction of its members of Congress do.
The Supreme Court recently allowed Texas’ redistricting plan to move forward, and Crockett, facing the possible end of her career in Congress, lashed out at the justices in a foul “f— you” style rant.
And she’s the object of a massive trolling campaign online.
Her comments (Be aware of her offensive language):
Rep. Jasmine Crockett (D-TX) says “f*** you” to the Supreme Court for basically ending her political career by allowing Texas redistricting to go forward.
Crockett has given up running for her House seat and is now desperately running for Senate. She has no chance.
She’s fired! pic.twitter.com/iGuN09n7Am
— Paul A. Szypula (@Bubblebathgirl) January 4, 2026
Social media’s verdict:
“I hear WAFFLE HOUSE is hiring…”
“Future real housewives of Compton case member.”
“She’s big mad.”
“She can go back to being a ‘slip and fall’ attorney.”
“Dumber than a box of Crocketts.”
“Good riddance.”
“Cry me a river.”
And, “Something about a snowball’s chance…?”
The Gateway Pundit described Crockett as “unhinged” and explained she “spewed her bile” on a list of interests “before directing an explicit vulgarity at the nation’s highest court.”
It was a ruling from those nine justices that cleared the way for Texas to install its new congressional map that is expected to give the GOP as many as five additional House seats, “reflecting population shifts and voter trends that Democrats have long tried to suppress through court challenges and racial gerrymandering claims.”
Crockett’s district, the report said, was effectively “dismantled.”