“Shark Tank” co-star Kevin O’Leary suggested that Vice President Kamala Harris needs to distance herself from President Joe Biden if she wants her economic policies to resonate with Americans.

Harris appeared alongside President Biden in Maryland on Thursday, where they highlighted the administration’s initiative to enable Medicare to negotiate drug prices.

On Fox News’ “The Story with Martha MacCallum,” O’Leary argued that Harris should separate herself from Biden on economic issues, noting that polls have shown his economic policies to be unpopular.

“What I was really listening for was if she was gonna center somewhere,” O’Leary said. “Because if the strategy is just bash big business, bash energy, bash Pharma, bash [US Aggregate Bond], bash everything, then she’s a leftist again, she can’t win the election. So my prediction is and we’ll know more next week after the convention, she has to get rid of Biden. I understand the heritage thing and everything, but she’s gotta distance herself from Bidenomics, that is radioactive waste for voters. So if she doesn’t bring some daylight in and go to the center, she’ll just lose.”

According to a report from Axios on Wednesday, Harris is reportedly planning to distance herself from Biden’s economic policies, often referred to as “Bidenomics,” which have consistently been seen as a weak point in his presidency.

The vice president is expected to unveil her first major economic plan at a rally on Friday in Raleigh, North Carolina, where she will reportedly propose a federal ban on alleged corporate “price-gouging” on food and groceries.

Biden informed Fox News White House correspondent Peter Doocy on Thursday that Harris has no plans to distance herself from his economic policies.

White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre also refuted the idea that Harris intends to create any separation, stating on Wednesday that the vice president was actively involved in advancing the president’s economic agenda.

“What I will tell you is Bidenomics has been something that both the president and the vice president has worked on,” Jean-Pierre said Wednesday. “You guys have called it ‘Bidenomics,’ we talk about how the president is trying to put forward an economic policy building from the bottom-up, middle-out that does not leave behind the middle class and make sure it has equity at the center of it.”