Elisabeth Hasselbeck Reunites with Joy Behar on “The View” and Reverses Course After Their Feud

Elisabeth Hasselbeck Reunites with Joy Behar on

During the March 3 Hot Topics segment of The View, guest co-host Elisabeth Hasselbeck and Joy Behar reunited

People Joy Behar; Elisabeth HasselbeckCredit: ABC (2)

NEED TO KNOW

  • In January 2025, Hasselbeck publicly slammed Behar for her criticism of Carrie Underwood's decision to perform at President Donald Trump's second inauguration and called The View "a sinking ship"

  • In the recent episode, the two did not address their feud but acknowledged their years-long friendship

One year afterElisabeth Hasselbeckpublicly calledJoy Beharout for being "selfish," the two have reunited.

On the Tuesday, March 3 episode ofThe View,Hasselbeck, 48, kicked off her second day guest hosting the morning talk show at the Hot Topics table with Behar, 83,Whoopi Goldberg,Sunny HostinandSara Haines. While Hasselbeck previously slammed Behar for her criticism ofCarrie Underwood's participationat PresidentDonald Trump's inauguration in January 2025, the two did not address the feud.

"I missed you yesterday, Joy," theSurvivoralum said at the top of the show.

"It's like the old days with me and Elisabeth, how long were we here together?" Behar replied.

Joy Behar, Sunny Hostin, Elisabeth HasselbeckCredit: ABC

Hasselbeck was a main co-host onThe Viewfrom 2003 to 2013, is temporarily filling in for Alyssa Farah Griffin this week while she is on maternity leave. On Tuesday's episode, Hasselbeck further claimed that she and Behar "are like family."

Hostin, 57, even joked that Behar didn't like Hasselbeck's dress that day, which was a sign of their friendship.

"You know you're close to Joy when she starts making fun of the clothes you're wearing," Hostin teased.

After Underwood was announced as the "National Anthem" performer at Trump's second inauguration last year,the singer released a statement defendingher decision, writing, "I love our country and am honored to have been asked to sing at the Inauguration and to be a small part of this historic event. I am humbled to answer the call at a time when we must all come together in the spirit of unity and looking to the future."

Behar was among those disappointed by Underwood's decision and shared her thoughts during a segment ofThe Viewat the time.

"I would not normalize him," she explained. "[Underwood] says, 'I love our country.' How do you love our country and support and normalize somebody who was a convicted felon who really wants to destroy the country in my opinion? I don't understand how you say you love your country at the same time as you normalize this convicted felon, which, I can say now every day."

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"I would not be the person to say, 'Don't do it,' because I believe in free speech and everything about it," Behar added. "I personally would not do it. No one's asked me, but that's another story."

That same day, Hasselbeck referenced the comments in a post onX. "That @TheView @JoyVBehar needs to simmer down off my friend," she wrote, before sharing another post that claimed Behar called Underwood "Un-American," although the TV personality did not ever use that phrase.

Hasselbeck also shared a photo of Behar to her Instagram Story with the caption, "Joy — @carrieunderwood is an INCREDIBLE WOMAN. You could learn from her strength."

Elisabeth Hasselbeck; Carrie Underwood; Joy BeharCredit: Terry Wyatt/Getty (2); Charles Sykes/Bravo via Getty

Hasselbeck later appeared onSean Hannity's Fox News show, where she accusedThe Viewof refusing "to put anyone there who has a lick of sense on most days." She also said that Behar's criticism was "nothing more than selfish personal publicity-gaining right now," speculating that Behar "wants to attach her name to Carrie Underwood's name so that she maintains relevance because she knows the ship is sinking."

When Hasselbeck returned toThe Viewon Monday, March 2, she told her co-hosts that "civil discourse is not dead."

"We might have differences of opinion, but we love each other and we're stronger," she continued. "I actually think for the young people watching it's important to see that you can have — Whoopi, you've said it before — we can hold our positions in one hand, and each other's hand in the other, and be able to just live as Americans with the freedom that we have and speak our hearts and minds."

"We get to do that all week. It might get a little spicy at times, but we do not hate each other, we love each other. We have the freedom to do it, and it's important to remind everybody of that," she went on to say.

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The Viewairs weekdays on ABC.

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