Conservative podcaster Isabel Brown is lashing out at The View hosts after enduring brutal mockery over her family life.
The women of ABC’s The View mocked Brown for her advice to young Americans at a large gathering of conservatives – at CPAC – encouraging them to fall in love, get married, and ‘have more kids than they can afford.’
Guest panelist on The View Whitney Cummings, 43, a mother with one daughter, ridiculed Brown’s advice.
‘Let’s check in with your boobs in a year and see if you want more kids,’ she said, suggesting Brown was too young and naive to talk about parenting.
But Brown, 28, the mother of her first one-year-old baby daughter and a podcaster for the Daily Wire, said she was ready.
‘I’ve been breastfeeding for 11 months and very vocal about that,’ Brown said in an exclusive interview with the Daily Mail.
‘My boobs are doing just fine. I definitely want more children, and it’s one of the most beautiful experiences that I ever could have asked for.’
Cummings also mocked Brown for promoting motherhood when her daughter was just one year old, when babies basically ‘sleep all day.’

Isabel Brown, host of the Isabel Brown Show, attends the 2026 Conservative Political Action Conference

Hosts of The View attacked Brown for her advice to young people at CPAC

Isabel Brown is still mourning the loss of Charlie Kirk in the conservative movement, but is determined to push forward with her message to young people
‘That’s news to me, my baby hasn’t slept through the night her entire life, basically,’ Brown replied, adding that she only recently got her first full night of sleep in over a year.
Brown also took issue with show host Ana Navarro’s assertion that couples would need to make $400,000 a year to be able to afford childcare.
‘Look, the idea that any family would be paying $400,000 a year for childcare is maybe the most ridiculous lie I’ve ever heard on TV,’ she said.
Brown juggles her public appearances and podcasting career for the Daily Wire with her new life as a mother, while her husband makes $74,500 annually by working in the White House digital office, according to public records.
Together, the couple is working through the challenges of early parenthood.
When Brown went to CPAC, she told the Daily Mail her husband was home with the baby as they were working on sleep training for the first time.
Brown got her start in politics and media by interning for various political organizations in Washington, DC, including at the White House before she met her husband and got married.
Time flies, she admits, as she and her friends are now working full time jobs at the White House or in other influential jobs in Washington, DC all while having children.
‘We all talk to each other very, very regularly to support one another, but reminding women, you are capable of so much more than what the mainstream narrative,’ Brown said.
Brown recently brought her daughter to the White House to celebrate International Women’s Day, but had to make a hasty exit during the president’s remarks when her child became inconsolable. She shared her entire experience with viewers of her show, taking everything in stride.
Brown is grateful she now has some experience living the life she and her friends have promoted for years, sharing as much as she can about the ups and downs of motherhood.
‘It’s taught me so much about the things I speak about,’ she said.
She said she was surprised that the women of The View, all mothers themselves, were not more supportive of a conversation, rather than taking a snippet of her remarks and making fun of her.
‘I think this is just kind of classic, catty girl, mean high school cafeteria behavior,’ she said.
When Brown’s team reached out to The View to offer to come on the show to explain herself, she was rejected.
‘I will welcome the opportunity and fly to New York tomorrow, if that’s the case, but how sad that they didn’t give me a heads up,’ she said.
Brown says she supported the Trump administration’s efforts to give families more tax breaks and other policies to help young couples have the chance to purchase their first home and to start having children.

Isabel Brown at the White House Executive office building where she works

Isabel Brown and her nearly one-year-old baby at the White House
She was supportive of Vice President JD Vance’s proposals as a senator to mandate insurance companies to cover the full cost of childbirth and offer better maternity leave policies. She also endorsed proposals to eliminate federal income tax for women who had two or more children.
‘I think there’s a great opportunity for some bipartisan pro-family discussion here that really isn’t about a left person or right or a Democrat versus Republican, but is about prioritizing culturally the family of the cornerstone of culture again,’ she said.
Brown worked as an activist for the late Charlie Kirk for eight years, who also encouraged young people to embrace marriage and family life, rather than postpone it out of fear or for professional reasons.
Kirk’s death, she noted, was a shock to all of them, as she watched many of her colleagues in the podcasting and influencing space start tearing each other apart.
‘We’re very sorely hurting for an ideological compass,’ she noted. ‘We’ve certainly felt the absence of his sense of his offensive direction in the last several months, more than I expected to.’
She said she was grateful that she got to spend time with Kirk in his final days, at one point discussing faith and theology with him backstage at an event.
Those were simpler times, she recalled, when everyone at Turning Point USA was running around doing fun man-on-the-street videos and debating people on college campuses.
The shock of his murder, Brown said, would never go away.
‘We live in a type of world that would kill someone for the crime of wanting to have conversations with people that he disagreed with,’ she said.
All of his fans and followers were deeply scarred by his death, which she admitted, they ‘never expected.’ After Kirk’s death, she drew even closer to her faith as the gravity of her chosen profession grew.
Now wrestling with that fear is part of the job.
‘Sometimes this does involve putting your life and your safety on the line to fight for these timeless values that we believe in so much,’ she said.


