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“Yes, I voted for Trump. I’m so tired of my old fans.” In the US, these influencers who are removing the mask.

Since the inauguration of Donald Trump as the new President of the United States, many people have openly demonstrated their vote and their confidence in the new lifestyle sub-slogan, “Make Americans Healthy Again.”

Tongues have been wagging since the Republican infiltrated the corridors of the White House for the second time. At the beginning of November, Donald Trump won the US presidential election over his rival Democrat Kamala Harris, thus becoming the 47th president of the United States of America. And it is especially for women that Melania’s husband owes his overwhelming victory. “Millions of Americans voted for him and it makes me cry,” Franco-Canadian writer Nancy Huston echoed on France Inter’s morning show the day after the results.

MAGA’s turn

Among them there are many lifestyle influencers who, although they were quite silent during the entire campaign, seem to have decided to reveal themselves. Esha Javed, who has nearly 786,000 followers on TikTok, is one of those who have wasted their (alleged) discretion. After tweeting that she had lost nearly a thousand followers since the election, the young woman shared a video (above) expressing her feelings. I’m no longer the stupid, brainwashed liberal I was when I was 19, and finally people hate me just because I switched sides. But it’s over for me. I’m so tired of my old fans and I don’t care about your political ideas. Yes, I voted for Donald Trump and I hate fat people,” he said on a Chinese social network. This is said.

The sequence, which was shared and liked thousands of times, was certainly divisive, but also gained many more subscribers… The same goes for another lifestyle influencer (with about 44,200 followers) and founder of the brand Agent, Jenna Covello, who rejoiced after Donald Trump’s victory. a day later. “I’m not a businessman, I’m a business, man,” we can read on the profile of the latter, which is written under the photo of the new president, a young man holding wads of bills. A twist on MAGA (short for “Make America Great Again”) that upset some of his fans who were shocked at its publication. “Do you seriously support Trump?”, “What the hell?” they raged in the comments.

Nora Smith, a Mormon businesswoman (Housewife 2.0) who had 4.5 million followers on Instagram without even posting anything, received the same criticism. As reported, the 23-year-old young mother really got a wave of hate The Daily Beast: After a pro-Trump post by her husband, model Lucky Blue Smith, with whom she had three children.

“Make America Healthy Again”

Among the influencers who are now embracing their republican ideals, the United States has a large number of personalities who have become health and wellness gurus. News on the platform Substackinfluencer and podcaster Jordan Younger thus condemned and described as “disgusting” the insults directed at Trump supporters and the complete refusal to accept a point of view different from the right-wing thinking of the left. Like him, others therefore lined up behind Robert F. Kennedy Jr., who is close to Donald Trump and appointed by the latter as health secretary. Without any scientific training, the nephew of slain President John F. Kennedy, known for his conspiracy theories about Covid-19 vaccines, rallied thousands of young women on the campaign trail under the slogan “Make America Healthy Again,” promising under the Trump administration: “clean up public health agencies and the USDA.” Those who were already crusading against pharmaceutical companies and industrial agriculture have thus become real fighters in the conservative camp.

Among these new leading figures is, for example, Alex Clark, who on August 26 posted a photo next to Donald Trump wearing a dress tied at the waist with a scarf in the colors of the American flag. “Big Pharma – Your Days Are Numbered – Trump 2024 – Make America Healthy Again”. Same positioning for Vani Hari, an American fitness blogger with 2 million followers on Instagram, in the front row of Kennedy Jr.’s speeches.

Finally, as reported The Cut:many influential people were reluctant to openly support Trump before the election results. “Maybe there were concerns about being MAGA or MAHA in terms of getting sponsors,” explained Lauren Lipsey, a marketing consultant, in a media column. “But now that he’s won, that fear is gone,” he concluded.

Source: Le Figaro

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