The recently reactivated X account tied to former Vice President Kamala Harris is drawing scrutiny after it reposted a video of the rock band Green Day invoking Jeffrey Epstein during a pre-Super Bowl performance.
The band appeared during the Super Bowl opening ceremony at Levis Stadium in Santa Clara on Sunday, a set that remained relatively restrained by their usual standards. Yet on Friday, at a pre-Super Bowl party, the group delivered a far more overtly political show, according to Mediaite.
At one point, lead singer Billie Joe Armstrong turned his fire on federal immigration officers, urging ICE agents to quit your shitty-ass job and warning that the Trump administration would drop you like a bad fucking habit at the end of President Donald Trumps term. The rhetoric fit neatly within the left-wing, anti-enforcement narrative that has long targeted those tasked with upholding immigration law.
Armstrong also injected current controversies into his lyrics, altering a line mid-song to declare, The representative from Epsteins Island has the floor. The reference to Epsteins notorious circle of elites underscored how cultural figures increasingly weaponize pop performances to score political points.
That moment was quickly amplified online by the account @HQNewsNow, which posted: Billie Joe Armstrong changes the lyrics during Super Bowl pre-game concert: The representative from Epsteins Island has the floor. The clip gained added prominence when the Harris-linked account chose to boost it, signaling approval from a brand now openly aligned with progressive activism.
The account had previously operated under the handle KamalaHQ before relaunching earlier in the week with a new identity. Its rollout featured a video of Harris outlining the next chapter for the platform, with a caption promising Headquarters would become a Gen-Z led progressive content hub, a move for which the former VP was ruthlessly mocked by critics who see it as yet another attempt to manufacture youth support through curated left-wing content rather than substantive policy.
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