WARNING: The following contains spoilers for Harley Quinn Season 2, Episode 13, "The Runaway Bridesmaid," now streaming on DC Universe.

Harley Quinn's second season was quite the test for Commissioner Jim Gordon. With the Justice League sucked into the Queen of Fables' book and Batman out of commission, he stepped up to try to protect Gotham. However, with the Injustice League dividing it into their own territories after America cut the city off, not to mention Harley's gang running around, Gordon found life tough.

Granted, he didn't have a precinct or cops, so fans could understand why he underwent another mental breakdown and turned to drinking. Still, he rose up and helped fight off the Parademons and Dr. Psycho, albeit in a haphazard manner, but as the season ends, the series makes a shocking reveal. Gordon's no hero; he's actually Gotham's worst villain.

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This Gordon isn't the altruistic one from the movies, comics and other DC animated ventures. Along from chain-smoking and alcoholism, he has an ego problem, as seen when Barbara becomes Batgirl. He loves hogging the spotlight and taking credit; although, it comes off like he's overzealous and doing it all to impress Batman. However, as Two-Face confirms, there's something much more sinister there, and it has nothing to do with the Dark Knight.

Gordon's left fuming after the mayor has honored himself and the League with keys to the city, and when he meets up with Harvey Dent, Two-Face slips Gordon information about the villains coming to Kite Man and Poison Ivy's wedding. Dent says this could be Gordon's big moment, and when the Commissioner asks why he should trust him, the villain makes it clear that Gordon isn't in this job as a selfless person; he's doing it to be a celebrity. He loves pomp and circumstance because it's about climbing Gotham's corporate ladder, so Batman and the fight for justice are mere props to the Commissioner.

It's stunning to see that Gordon doesn't deny this. In fact, Dent points out the bust could take Gordon into the mayor's seat, and Gordon buys into this. At this point, it's clear Gordon's a politician who wants fame and power. This along with his messiah complex make him corrupt. His rash decisions are what encouraged the Parademons to burn the city in the first place, and now he's risking lives again with a poorly-planned covert operation. He doesn't care for collateral damage because people are expendable objects he can use to get what he wants.

RELATED: Harley Quinn: Kite Man Should Become Season 3's Antagonist

This is why he hires a media crew to follow him to capture the moment when he arrests Ivy's party, preferring coverage over safety. However, his ulterior motives drastically backfire because most of his undercover agents are murdered when Harley reveals what's going down. The likes of Bane, King Shark, etc. rip them to shreds, and Gordon's caught on camera, out of his depth and pathetically fleeing the scene.

As someone who's botched the force's mission, Gordon's stupidity and shady ways are unacceptable.  He kills off dozens again by placing them in the line of fire thanks to his narcissism, all so he could look like a star for the cameras. To make it worse, he wants people to trust him as the public face of justice, so he's manipulating and lying to the general public. That makes him the most dangerous threat to Gotham as he's using innocent lives, heroes and criminals as cogs for self-gain.

DC Universe's Harley Quinn stars Kaley Cuoco, Lake Bell, Diedrich Bader, Alan Tudyk, Rahul Kohli, Christopher Meloni, Tony Hale, Ron Funches, Wanda Sykes, Natalie Morales, Jim Rash, Giancarlo Esposito, Jason Alexander and J.B. Smoove.

KEEP READING: DC Universe's Harley Quinn Season 2 Was Poison Ivy's Season