She’s putting the “Ha” in Harris.
An Oklahoma mother of five has earned more than half a million TikTok followers with her hilarious online impersonations of Vice President Kamala Harris — mimicking the White House candidate’s infamous “cackle” and labeling her character, “Mommala.”
Tiffany Murray said she pokes fun at the “irony and hypocrisy” — and TikTokkers can’t get over how “spot on” her impression is.
“Has ‘Saturday Night Live’ reached out to you yet?” one asked.
“The laugh is perfect,” another said.
“Not sure if it’s a compliment but besides the near perfect impersonation, you have an uncanny resemblance to her too,” someone else added.
She never runs out of new content, said Murray, 42, who goes by the nickname Dahlia on her TikTok handle @onthedailywithdahlia.
“When people are saying things, but doing another thing, I really hone in on it . . . For instance, the job of the border all of a sudden wasn’t her job. It’s the hypocrisy for me. That’s what it is,” said the former paralegal from Kay County, about two hours west of Tulsa.
“There’s been so many, I mean, where do we begin?” she told The Post. “When she told everybody to ‘do not come‘ — but then the border’s wide open. That’s a classic. The AI thing was funny. She’s like, ‘AI, two letters.’”
In one recent clip, Murray’s “Mommala” put in earpieces as she prepped for her debate with Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump.
“They’ll be filling me in with all the lies,” she quipped in the clip, a nod to the conspiracy theorists who think Harris’ earrings had Bluetooth devices built in.
“I just took it and ran with it, the irony of it,” she said of the post, which racked up 1 million views and over 100,000 likes so far.
“I actually posted another one . . . I think I said the Obamas were in the right ear. It’s just telling everybody, ‘Hey, these people are puppets in some form . . . and they’re being told what to do.’”
Murray, whose political stance is “a little Republican, a little conspiracy theory, a little what’s best for my family,” began imitating Harris in 2020. The video that really put her on the map was when she mocked Harris’ border policy and garnered more than 5 million views.
To perfect Harris’ now-infamous dismissive laugh, Murray uses some of her own chuckle.
“I kind of laugh like that. Not to that extent, it takes a lot of air. But then I throw in some extra dramatics with it,” she said.
To really nail her impression, she also listens to clips of Harris’ ever-changing accents.
“I was watching a video this morning and she’s doing a new accent. It’s more of like a Hispanic accent. So then I just repeat it and I go from there,” said Murray, whose mother is half Native American, half Mexican, and whose father is Portuguese, Puerto Rican and African American.
When asked what she’d offer her audience if Harris loses the election, Murray thought on the fly.
“‘Listen, Trump, any chance you’re hiring?”