"Outnumbered" panelists directed harsh criticism at Vice President Kamala Harris on Tuesday for her latest "cringe" story to explain her apparent, lifelong disdain for conservative Americans.

During an interview Monday, the vice president said she came home one day when she was a child and asked, "Why are conservatives bad, Mommy?"

She continued her story through laughter, saying, "I thought we were supposed to conserve things, but I couldn't reconcile it. Now I can."

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"Outnumbered" co-host Kayleigh McEnany highlighted the blatant contrast from Harris’ previous push for unity in 2016 when she was serving as California’s attorney general. Harris at the time tweeted, "Our unity is our strength and our diversity is our power. We reject the myth of ‘us’ versus ‘them.’ We are in this together."

"Cringe," McEnany said. "It's a far cry from the message of unity she projected."

McEnany then recalled other instances of Kamala Harris’ strange interviews accompanied by awkward laughter, like her October rant about Venn diagrams. 

Co-host Emily Compagno pulled no punches while criticizing the vice president, arguing that Harris says "absolutely nothing of substance." 

"Get down to business. Stop the laughing, stop the inappropriate affect. Tell us what you are doing for this country because we are being let down every day to a horrible soundtrack I can't get out of my ears," Compagno said, referring to Harris’ cackling.

Compagno then noted that she grew up in the same area of California as Harris, likely where her childhood story about "bad" conservatives took place.

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Kamala Harris

Vice President Kamala Harris shares an anecdote at an event in Colorado.

"Weirdly, I came out of that same neighborhood the way I am, knowing that my values reflect American people and hard work and ethic and freedoms and a lot of things that she has yet to articulate or yet to support with her policies," Compagno said.

Former NFL sideline reporter Michele Tafoya joined in mocking the vice president’s laughter.

"I think that the people around her tell her her laugh is cute and it makes her human. I can only believe that," Tafoya said.

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She then shared a story from her own childhood, when her engineer father would bring home from work cut-up blueprints stapled to cardboard for her to use as a notepad at school.

"It was recycling, and we were conservatives, and we were conserving paper," Tafoya explained.

"Conservatives aren’t all bad. When [Harris] mentions ‘conservative’ and ‘bad,’ it makes me think of someone like my dad and my mom, and – I'm sorry – they weren't bad."