'Low self-esteem' MAGA hammered by red-state critic
Port Charlotte, Florida, is part of Charlotte County — which voted for President Donald Trump by a solid two-to-one margin in 2024. It was named one of the top ten places to retire in 2012. Still seen as a deeply red state, Democrats are making inroads into the Sunshine State. Ahead of the August primary, in the race for governor, Republican Byron Donalds often polls ahead of Democrat David Jolly but only by single digits, according to data from The New York Times . Donald Trump won the state by 13 points in 2024. A letter to the editor highly critical of President Donald Trump and his MAGA base in a Port Charlotte news outlet could be seen as surprising. “MAGA crowd, Trump are all about winning,” reads the headline. “Donald Trump and the MAGA movement have turned American politics into a fan-based team sport,” writes its author, Gayle Yarnall. “Governing has become an us versus them rivalry regardless of the consequences. It is all about winning,” she laments. “The 2024 election is long over. Yet, there are Trump signs, banners, and flags still posted around. It is akin to displaying the flag of your favorite teams like the Patriots or the Buckeyes. What is the purpose except to express that, ‘I’m on a winning team’?” Yarnall asks. “No one will be persuaded to vote for Trump. The election is done and he won. Is there any memory of Reagan, Biden, Bush, Obama, or Clinton flags or signs posted months or years after the election? Of course not.” Yarnall calls the still-flying banners and flags “visual reminders” for “those with low self-esteem, feeling left out and unheard.” “They scream, ‘look at me, we won, I’m on a winning team,'” she says. “Even when gas prices spike, the cost of tariffs are passed on, a war continues, inflation is rising in all sectors it matters not because my team won.” In a last-ditch plea, Yarnall asks her neighbors, “Please remember to vote!
Port Charlotte, Florida, is part of Charlotte County — which voted for President Donald Trump by a solid two-to-one margin in 2024. It was named one of the top ten places to retire in 2012.Still seen as a deeply red state, Democrats are making inroads into the Sunshine State. Ahead of the August pri...
Opening excerpt. Read the full story at Newsdata · Florida Politics ↗
Sourced from Newsdata · Florida Politics · indexed by Statura on June 13, 2026. Statura indexes Florida political news and tags it by industry and jurisdiction so government-affairs teams can monitor signal without scanning every outlet by hand. Read the full story at Newsdata · Florida Politics ↗
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