Even Bill Maher has seen enough of the Democrat Party’s fake flag-waving.
He finally said out loud what millions of Americans have been thinking since the 2024 campaign.
And when Maher played the clip of Kamala Harris trying to sound like a patriot, the audience reaction said everything.
America turns 250 this year, and President Donald Trump has made clear he plans to celebrate in a big way. Fireworks, fanfare, the whole nine yards. And the Democrat response? Sulk. Boycott. Refuse to show up because they don’t like who’s throwing the party.
That pettiness finally got to be too much even for Bill Maher.
On a recent episode of HBO’s Real Time, Maher used his “new rule” segment to dress down his own side for what he called a self-defeating refusal to love the country they claim to want to lead. The occasion was America’s 250th birthday celebrations, and Maher wasn’t having the left’s collective sulk about it.
“This is about America,” Maher told his audience. “He isn’t America. He’s a temporary caretaker of America, America’s employee. And the message should be that America isn’t actually his and that no one’s side gets to own being psyched about the country. So I’m not down with this attitude of, well, we’re having a party, but if Trump’s going, I’m not.”
Then came the line that brought down the house: “That’s so high school it should be in the Epstein files.”
But the sharpest moment came when Maher turned his attention to Kamala Harris and her 2024 convention speech — the one where Democrats draped the stage in American flags and Harris talked about the country like she’d just discovered it two weeks before Election Day.
“Every election year, Democrats seem to remember patriotism for about an hour at their convention when they’re trying to win back swing voters,” Maher said. “The whole message of Kamala’s speech in 2024 was take back the flag. That’s why she talked about America like a pageant contestant.”
He then played a clip of Harris declaring that the “greatest privilege on Earth” is the “privilege and pride of being an American.”
Maher’s response was three words: “Hard to believe she lost, huh?”
The crowd erupted. And honestly, what else is there to say? You can’t spend years letting the left-wing base treat the American flag as a symbol of oppression, then waltz out onto a convention stage and act like you’ve always been the patriot in the room. Voters aren’t that forgetful.
“You can’t take back the flag in an hour if the rest of the time you treat patriotism as something vaguely embarrassing,” Maher said.
He’s right. And it stings a little more coming from him, because Maher is not exactly a conservative. He’s been one of the louder critics of Trump for years. But even he can see that the Democrat Party has handed Republicans the flag by default — not because Republicans are more deserving of it, but because Democrats spent years acting like loving America was something to be ashamed of.
Maher went back to his own past to make the point. He recalled wearing a patriotic T-shirt the entire summer of 1976 during the bicentennial, and nobody read it as an endorsement of the sitting president. Liberals back then didn’t surrender patriotism to the Right. He even invoked Abbie Hoffman, the 1960s radical who showed up before the House Un-American Activities Committee wearing an American flag shirt, as an example of the defiant, unapologetic patriotism the modern left has completely abandoned.
And a new Reuters/Ipsos poll backs up what Maher is describing. Among adults surveyed in mid-June, 64% of Republicans said they planned to display an American flag or flag bunting outside their home this July 4, compared to just 27% of Democrats. That gap doesn’t happen by accident. It’s the result of years of the left treating the flag as a political prop at best and a symbol of nationalism at worst — until election season rolls around and suddenly everyone’s a patriot.
Maher acknowledged he’s worried about some things happening in Washington. He mentioned what he called “creeping authoritarianism” and the politicization of the Justice Department. But he drew a firm line between raising those concerns and refusing to celebrate the country itself, arguing that Democrats who blur the line between Trump and America are actually doing Trump’s work for him.
“That’s what wannabe authoritarians do,” he said. “Don’t be an accomplice.”
He also pushed back on the idea that the courts have been helpless against Trump, noting that legal challenges have succeeded on a number of fronts and that Trump has lost the vast majority of cases where courts have ruled against the administration’s position. His argument was essentially that if the system is still working — even imperfectly — then the country is still worth celebrating.
None of that is a ringing endorsement of the America First agenda. Maher is still Maher. But the fact that he went after his own party this directly, on national television, using Kamala Harris as the punchline, says something about where the Democrat brand actually stands right now.
Harris’s “take back the flag” moment was always a little painful to watch. It had the energy of someone who’d just been told by a focus group that they needed to seem more American. And voters picked up on exactly that. You can’t fake love of country. People can tell when it’s real and when it’s a campaign prop, and in 2024, they made their feelings known at the ballot box.
Maher wrapped up with a plea for Democrats to stop letting partisan grievance swallow the whole calendar. “Don’t let this year’s Fourth become another excuse for partisan sulking,” he said. “Let it be an excuse to be really hungover on the fifth.”
But the damage is already done in a lot of ways. The left spent years building a political culture where loving America out loud was considered naive or worse. Now they want to “take back the flag” in a single convention speech, and they’re genuinely confused about why it didn’t work. Bill Maher isn’t confused. And neither is anyone who watched what happened in November 2024.
Sources: Mediaite; Fox News; The Washington Times; Reuters/Ipsos poll, June 12-15, 2026