‘We’re the majority now’: MAGA returns to Washington, with a whole new vibe

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Darren Pellegrino left his home in Hawthorne, New Jersey, at 3 a.m. Sunday to drive to Washington’s Capital One sports arena. By 8 a.m., when he joined legions of other supporters of incoming President Donald Trump waiting to get into a pre-inauguration afternoon rally, the line already stretched several blocks deep – and kept growing.

Mr. Pellegrino, who installs home swimming pools, had attended Trump rallies before, so he knew he’d be among friends. Back home, he hasn’t always felt welcome to express his views. But lately, he says, the mood has changed even in Democratic-run New Jersey.

“You can go out and wear a MAGA hat. It’s ok to support Trump,” he says.

Why We Wrote This

Donald Trump and his MAGA movement are in power once more – and this time, the outsiders are looking more like insiders, at the vanguard of a cultural and political shift that could be profound.

When Mr. Trump rode into Washington in 2017, the reception he received was as frosty as the outdoor temperatures on inauguration day. Four years later, in 2021, he left the White House under a cloud, after Trump loyalists stormed the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, in a failed effort to stall or overturn his election defeat. Mr. Trump headed into what seemed like permanent exile at his Mar-a-Largo redoubt in Florida.

But now, the incoming president and his MAGA movement are triumphant once more – and this time, they’re hardly the wild-eyed rebels taking over a hostile fortress. The outsiders are looking more like insiders, the vanguard of a cultural and political shift that could be far more profound than in his first presidency. Mr. Trump has remade the Republican Party, once stuffed with lawmakers and powerbrokers who looked down on him, in his image. He’s also racked up support from wealthy entrepreneurs ready to shed inhibitions about his abrasive brand of politics.

It’s a far cry from the candidate who was seen as a political outlier and “a bit of an accidental president” after an upset win in 2016, says Susan Stokes, director of the Center on Democracy at the University of Chicago. “He has more legitimacy this time around … and he’s a more powerful and confident political actor.”

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