ABC’s “The View” co-host, Whoopi Goldberg, made headlines again recently when she attempted to explain voting using some fairly peculiar terminology, turning an ordinary political discussion into an eyebrow-raising moment.

The incident began when someone brought up the fact that former congresswoman Liz Cheney had suggested running as a third party to challenge Donald Trump.

In response to the suggestion, Alyssa Farah Griffin reiterated previously to the panel that the United States is “careening into dictatorship” under Trump’s leadership.

According to Griffin, Trump is allegedly preparing his White House staff for 2024, and she warned her co-hosts, “I cannot raise enough alarm bells about how dangerous he is.”

Given that Trump is projected to be the nominee “no matter what,” Sunny Hostin wondered if anyone is paying attention to the voices of Griffin and others like her. “Liz Cheney is our savior” because she “stands on democracy,” Hostin conceded.

“I would consider this sort of split ticket that she’s talking about,” she shared, while Goldberg chimed in to say that everyone thought she was “crazy” when she proposed the idea of a split ticket years ago.

Later in the segment, Goldberg proclaimed, “This is not about them, this is about us,” referring to the candidates in the upcoming presidential election. “We make this decision. I don’t like polls because polls can be manipulated. I like when somebody goes in and they vote.”

But she didn’t stop there. Goldberg emphatically continued, “I like when somebody puts their thing in the box” — at this point, she used exaggerated hand gestures to mime shoving something into an imaginary container — before adding, “and they walk back, you know? Because then you can see what someone did.”

Sara Haines, who was sitting next to Goldberg, gave her a shocked expression after hearing her remarks.

She turned to Haines and apologized, saying, “I know that sounded worse than I meant it.” Thankfully, Goldberg caught her innuendo.

“It did, yeah,” Hostin told Goldberg, and the rest of the panel, including Haines, laughed. But Goldberg was adamant, saying, “I know where it came from now!”

The show made headlines earlier this week when another co-host made some controversial comments.

Meghan McCain, who formerly co-hosted “The View,” has hinted at suing her former co-worker Ana Navarro for defamation for suggesting that he had illegally profited from her family’s name.

In response to Navarro’s recent comparison to Hunter Biden, the political commentator—the daughter of late U.S. Senator John McCain—threatened legal action. In an X post, McCain expressed his confusion about why his former coworkers.

“I don’t understand why my former colleagues bring me up and slander me on an almost weekly basis,” McCain wrote in an X post. “It has been years. Move on, I have.”

McCain’s tweet was in response to comments made by Navarro, who defended Hunter Biden by claiming that influence peddling is common.

“And being Hunter Biden’s very loving father, very good father, very supportive father. Look, did Hunter Biden influence peddle on his last name? Yes, he did. So did half of Washington. People sitting at this table did it,” Navarro said, referring to McCain.

“I have never been accused of a crime in my life and am a patriotic American — I would never and have never ‘influence peddled’ in my life, let alone with foreign adversaries. Not all politicians’ children are the same — and I am no Hunter Biden,” McCain said in response to the comments. She then hinted at potential legal action if Navarro does not issue a retraction.

Meghan McCain Fights Back Nepo Baby Claims By ‘The View’ Co-Host: “Nobody Has Trafficked On The McCain Last Name & Legacy More Than Ana Navarro” https://t.co/8SansTyCOE

— Deadline Hollywood (@DEADLINE) December 20, 2023

“All accusations are absurd, defamatory and slanderous. I will be consulting my lawyers regarding what was libeled against me on The View this morning.”

McCain tweeted another response to ABC, The View’s parent network, by saying: “I do not take it lightly when any news program suggests I engage in criminal behavior, especially as a former employee of ABC News.”

McCain, who was the show’s “conservative” pundit and a harsh critic of Trump, departed at the year’s conclusion in 2021. Alyssa Fara, another vocal opponent of Trump, took her place, having previously worked in Trump’s White House communications.