Young Trump devotees who bought into the "vibe shift" narrative during the 2024 campaign are experiencing cold, hard reality as the bloom rapidly falls off the Young Trump devotees who bought into the "vibe shift" narrative during the 2024 campaign are experiencing cold, hard reality as the bloom rapidly falls off the

'That time has passed': Trump's young MAGA fans now done with him as 'vibe' shifts

2026/03/17 20:45
3 min read
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Young Trump devotees who bought into the "vibe shift" narrative during the 2024 campaign are experiencing cold, hard reality as the bloom rapidly falls off the rose — and they're not happy about it.

According to the Washington Post, the cultural cachet that once surrounded Trump and his movement has evaporated. What was once positioned as hip, edgy conservatism now looks embarrassing to many who climbed aboard the MAGA train.

"We were cool for 2½ minutes — that time has passed," admitted Arynne Wexler, 32, a commentator and comedian who had hyped the supposed cultural realignment just months ago.

The shift from cultural cool to full-blown cringe happened faster than many expected. Just over a year into Trump's second term, the movement has become a punchline — a cautionary tale of what happens when political ideology tries too hard to seem relevant, the Post reported.

The examples are mounting: FBI Director Kash Patel partying with Olympic hockey players while facing fire for mismanaging bureau resources and botching high-profile investigations. Attorney General Pam Bondi assembling influencers with supposedly groundbreaking Epstein files, only to discover the "exclusive" documents had already been publicly released. Trump administration officials posing for Vanity Fair spreads while pretending to be anti-establishment outsiders. White House communications staffers deploying cartoon clips from "SpongeBob SquarePants" and "Call of Duty" to promote an Iran bombing campaign that's tanked in popularity across Trump's own coalition.

The original pitch was simple: MAGA represented unapologetic authenticity, the Post reported. Freedom from political correctness. A middle finger to the supposed joy-killing gatekeepers of mainstream culture. During Biden's presidency, this narrative had appeal—Elon Musk buying Twitter and declaring comedy "legal" again, Kid Rock shooting cases of Bud Light to protest trans-friendly advertising.

But something broke. The administration stopped listening to the outsider voices that gave the movement its initial appeal and started taking cues from establishment figures like Lindsey Graham.

"Outsiders were the coolest part of the movement, and they stopped listening to those people," said Bart Hutchins, 35, a MAGA-friendly Capitol Hill restaurant owner. "They kicked MAHA in the face and started listening to Lindsey Graham. The thing that was never cool is now in the driver's seat."

Now comes a troubling development: many Trump supporters privately recognize the movement has become cringe but won't say so publicly, fearing retaliation from the MAGA faithful, the Post reported. One prominent figure calls this phenomenon "preference falsification" — the psychological phenomenon where people hide their true beliefs out of fear.

Still, dissent is emerging. The new badge of honor among some Trump supporters? Being bold enough to criticize the administration for abandoning its campaign promises, the Post concluded.

You can read more here.

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