What one vulgar Trump T-shirt reveals about his movement – NPR

A vendor sells 2024 Donald Trump campaign souvenirs at the Turning Point Action USA conference in West Palm Beach, Flo., in 2023. Giorgio Viera/AFP via Getty Images hide caption

Trump rallies involve a lot of merch vendors sometimes set up overnight before a rally, preparing for the huge crowds. There are hats, socks, flags, buttons and, especially, T-shirts.

I go to a lot of these rallies. In the middle of it all, Ive gotten a little obsessed with this one particular shirt.

Miranda Barbee bought one in the hours before a Trump rally on the beach in Wildwood, New Jersey, and held it up, reading aloud.

I just bought this shirt for $20. It says Biden sucks, Kamala - what does that even swallows? I didn't even see the front! That is so funny. She flipped it around. And the back says, F**k Joe and the Hoe.

She and the friend she came with laughed.

I honestly didn't know the front said that, Barbee added. But I think that's hilarious.

These shirts have been sold prominently at recent rallies vendors who specialize in these particular shirts often stand right outside the entrances and exits, catching the eyes of the streams of Trump fans.

Theyre not official campaign apparel. When asked for comment, a campaign spokesperson didnt address the shirts directly, instead pointing to a Biden official campaign shirt (slogan: Free on Wednesdays) that pokes fun at Donald Trumps legal troubles.

Still, I wanted to know: why? Why do these shirts exist, and whos buying them? Sooner or later, I had spent so much time thinking about it, I wanted to know if there was anything to be learned here.

"The Hillary Nutcracker & Corkscrew Bill", a boxed set of a nutcracker and bottle corkscrew were available for sale during the 2009 holiday season. Paul J. Richards/AFP via Getty Images hide caption

Sexism isnt exactly new in politics.

Consider Americas decades of Hillary Clinton hatred. One T-shirt slogan around the time of her 2008 presidential campaign read I wish Hillary had married O.J., referring to O.J. Simpson who famously faced trial for his wife's murder. He was acquitted.

And then there was the Hillary Clinton nutcrackerdescribed gleefully by MSNBCs Willie Geist in 2007 as a Hillary doll with serrated stainless steel thighs that, well, crack nuts. To this, Tucker Carlson then also of MSNBC responded, "When she comes on television, I involuntarily cross my legs" and declared that he would be buying one.

Over the years, Michelle Obama, Nancy Pelosi and Sarah Palin would also be the targets of demeaning, often obscene merchandise.

But still, the open lewdness of the Trump t-shirts. Thats new, right? I asked Tim Miller, a Republican strategist who worked for Jon Huntsman and Jeb Bushs presidential campaigns.

It's not like you couldn't find a guy standing outside the RNC in 2012 selling some misogynistic Hillary stuff. It was there, but just the intensity of it, he said, just how crass it is, it's definitely a category difference.

That crassness has been around from the beginning at Trump rallies. As my colleague Don Gonyea reported in 2016, vendors then were selling shirts reading, Hillary sucks, but not the way Monica does.

What's different about Donald Trump is that his campaign is not particularly worried about this type of misogyny being attached to his campaign, because at least to date, it hasn't hurt him that much, explained Kelly Dittmar, director of research for the Center for American Women and Politics at Rutgers University.

A vendor sells t-shirts at a May 1, 2024, Trump rally in Freeland, Michigan. Danielle Kurtzleben/NPR hide caption

One example: Even after a jury found him civilly liable for sexual abuse last year, polls didnt budge.

Part of whats going on is partisan, Dittmar adds a reflection of an existing gender gap.

I think there's more kind of internal policing among Democrats about the fact that this is contrary to our brand and it hurts us, by the way, with the constituency that is our most reliable one, which is women.

Furthermore, she says, this kind of language is often particularly directed at women of color, like Kamala Harris. The word ho' on the shirt undeniably makes this about race as well as sex.

Meanwhile, Dittmar says, the Republican base is majority-men.

And of course, she said, of the women who do support [Republicans], they are more likely to say that this is just, you know, a joke.

That was true of voter Christena Kincaid, who talked to me just after she had bought one of these shirts at a rally in Freeland, Michigan.

It's just a slang. That's all it is, she said. It's a goofy it is a little over the top. I get it. But they're just words.

That idea, that theyre just words, fits with Trumps brand as an anti-PC crusader who tells it like it is, which has involved loudly insulting women, from Clinton to Megyn Kelly to Minnesota Rep. Ilhan Omar.

But also, the idea that words dont matter that much that echoes the response to the infamous Access Hollywood tape, which Trumps defenders shrugged off as locker room talk.

Rina Shah is a political strategist and a former Republican congressional aide, and a Republican who opposes Trump. She told me she thinks the shirts very much matter.

If we're allowing our kids to see this visually, even if it's contained at a rally, the person who wears that shirt at that rally isn't just going to wear that one day, she said. This flavor of incivility is permeating our nation's social fabric.

I did ask Bob Berger, who I met at that Freeland, Mich., rally, about wearing the shirt outside of a rally.

Are you worried about offending anyone when you wear it? I asked.

No.

"Do you think you'll be careful where you wear it? Like around, I don't know, grandkids?" I continued.

"Oh, maybe around the grandkids. I probably would be," he replied.

What Rina Shah said about Trumps incivility trickling down to his supporters seems true, whether its via clothing or simply their willingness to get nasty in talking about Biden and Harris.

As much as I hope Joe Biden gets arrested, whatever, is not in office anymore. I'm like, we're still stuck with the bitch. I dont want her either, said Barbee, the voter I met at that New Jersey rally, referring to Harris.

I asked her: Does that language feel demeaning to you as a young woman using words like bitch?

I mean, she is a bitch, she responded.

On top of that, you can also see all this the T-shirt slogans, the cuss words, Trumps vulgarity as a marker of a gap in American politics: a yawning partisan gap in attitudes about gender.

Those differences in gender beliefs are going to make it more permissible or not to put forth these types of messages without some sort of a backlash or pushing down, Dittmar of Rutgers University said.

Studies have found that Trump voters including women in 2016 were particularly likely to have beliefs that political scientists term hostile sexism. Furthermore, some found that these beliefs were prominent in a way they werent in 2012. Those hostile sexist beliefs include, for example, the idea that women are too easily offended.

Barbee, at that New Jersey rally, the voter who talked to me the longest about her shirt, echoed some of those beliefs.

I feel like feminism is becoming like a huge thing these days, but I also feel like it's people are overly sensitive, like they're reacting to things they shouldn't be reacting to.

Its an attitude thats been around for a long time. But her new T-shirt? That represented something new.

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What one vulgar Trump T-shirt reveals about his movement - NPR

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