TNT NBA analyst and Hall of Famer Charles Barkley didn't agree with the Republican Party's $1.5 trillion tax cut, but since he is one of its beneficiaries, he says he'll be getting himself a new watch.

'They say [the money is going to] trickle down,' Barkley said during TNT's 'Inside the NBA.' 'I'm going to trickle my fat a** down to the jewelry store and get me a new Rolex.'

An Alabama native and former Republican who supported Doug Jones's successful senate bid over accused pedophile Roy Moore in the recent special election, Barkley has been an outspoken critic of President Donald Trump and the G.O.P agenda in recent years.

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The 54-year-old Hall of Famer Charles Barkley: 'They say [the money is going to] trickle down. I'm going to trickle my fat a** down to the jewelry store and get me a new Rolex'

'Thank you Republicans,' Barkley laughed. 'I know I can always count on you to take care of us rich people, us one percenters.'

'Sorry poor people, I'm hoping for y'all,' he continued, 'but y'all ain't got no chance.'

Barkley was once an outspoken supporter of the G.O.P. in the 1990s, but has on numerous occasions explained that he changed his outlook when the Republicans 'lost their damn minds.'

The former Philadelphia 76ers, Phoenix Suns, and Houston Rockets star has also grown increasingly upset about the turmoil within his home state.

'At some point we have to stop looking like idiots to the nation,' Barkley said while campaigning for Jones.

He also took aim at Breitbart's Steve Bannon, who was campaigning for Moore.

'Only in Alabama could you send a white nationalist separatist who don't believe in race mixing to come to Alabama three times and get cheered at a Roy Moore rally,' Barkley said. 'That is crazy.'

Known as 'Sir Charles' and 'The Round Mound of Rebound,' Charles Barkley made a name for himself with the Philadelphia 76ers (right) before guiding the Phoenix Suns to the 1993 Finals

To Barkley, Moore's candidacy was an insult to the state of Alabama.

'Roy Moore was an embarrassment,' the former NBA MVP and two-time Olympic gold medalist told CNN. 'Hey listen, if any other man had eight women accusing him of sexual harassment, talking about how he really enjoyed slavery, he thinks people who are homosexual should go to jail, they wouldn't have even been in this election.

'I've been so lucky and blessed, but this is one of the greatest nights of my life,' he continued, referring to Jones's win. 'I'm so proud of my state for rising up and doing the right thing.

'We can't have that idiot representing us in the senate, and I'm just so proud of Doug and everybody who worked with him... I'm really just proud of the people of Alabama. They've been beat down for so long. They've been kept in a little box. They rose up tonight and I'm so proud of them.'

Barkley first starred at Auburn where he was named the SEC Player of the Year in 1984 and where his No. 34 was ultimately retired.

He was taken fifth overall by the Philadelphia 76ers in the 1984 NBA Draft behind Hakeem Olajuwon, Sam Bowie, Michael Jordan and Sam Perkins.

The 11-time NBA All-Star went on to be named to the All-NBA First Team five times and had his No. 34 retired in Philadelphia and Phoenix, the latter of which he guided to the 1993 NBA Finals where the Suns fell to Jordan's Chicago Bulls in six games.