Amy Schumer voiced her disgust with the election results in Mississippi on Tuesday night by calling Senate winner Cindy Hyde-Smith a drug addict.

The comedian, angry over the fact that Hyde-Smith managed to win the race despite telling supporters she would 'sit front row' at a 'public hanging' while running against a black Democratic candidate, expressed her feelings on Instagram.

'I guess what I’m really saying is F*** Hyde-Smith and anyone who voted for her. My feelings on her are best expressed by the above video,' wrote a pregnant Schumer, who in the accompanying video could be seen vomiting.

'And I don’t usually agree with speaking ill of crackheads, but she has a crackhead looking mouth. Tiny racist teeth.'

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Speaking out: Amy Schumer (above last November) posted avideo of herself vomiting on the way to a stand-up comedy show on Tuesday night and shared her disappointment with the Mississippi race

Cindy: 'I guess what I’m really saying is F*** Hyde-Smith and anyone who voted for her. My feelings on her are best expressed by the above video,' said Schumer (Hyde-Smith above on Tuesday)

Schumer did not stop there either, and next went after Rob Manfred, the commissioner of major league baseball.

'Also the MLB commissioner donated the max he could to her confederate a** campaign and that was after her crack mouth said she would attend a public hanging,' wrote Schumer.

She then added: '#crackmouth'

Manfred did not donate any money to Hyde-Smith's campaign, but the group which handles the league's political donations did in fact give $5,000 to the Republican.

That money was promised before her comment and Manfred was actually very vocal about wanting to get back that money.

In fact, Manfred has called on the FEC to create new guidelines which would make it easier for donors to take their money back should a incident arise like Hyde-Smith's remarks about attending a 'public hanging.'

That attempt to get the money back however did come after the donation was revealed by reporters.

Target: Schumer then went after MLB commissioner Ron Manfred (above in May) by falsely stating he made the maximum donation to Hyde-Smith's campaign after her 'hanging' remark

Hyde-Smith defeated Democrat Mike Espy, who was vying to become the state's first African-American senator since Reconstruction, during Tuesday's runoff.

The race was rocked by the video, in which Hyde-Smith said of a supporter, 'If he invited me to a public hanging, I'd be on the front row.'

A separate video showed her talking about 'liberal folks' and making it 'just a little more difficult' for them to vote.

The comments by Hyde-Smith, who is white, made Mississippi's history of racist lynchings a theme of the runoff and spurred many black voters to return to the polls on Tuesday.

In the aftermath of the video, Republicans worried they could face a repeat of last year's special election in Alabama, in which a flawed Republican candidate handed Democrats a reliable GOP Senate seat in the Deep South.

The GOP pumped resources into Mississippi, and President Donald Trump made a strong effort on behalf of Hyde-Smith, holding last-minute rallies in Mississippi on Monday.

Speaking to supporters after her win, Hyde-Smith vowed to fight for everyone in the state when she goes to Washington.