White suburban women — we drive minivans with “I used to be cool” stickers, we’re bffs with the Starbucks barista, and the over eager among us are presidents of our neighborhood associations, policing the shade of beige we just painted our front doors.

However, until last week, we were first and foremost an expected pro-abortion vote for Kamala — otherwise known as the Democrats’ ace in the hole. Democrats put all their marbles in an uninformed identity politics box, and it blew up in their face.

Opinions are formed by what people are experiencing. And white suburban women have experienced a whole lot of bad.

From gas to groceries — prices are higher on everything, and women tend to feel the pinch more because we generally take on more of these everyday responsibilities. 

The safety of our kids keeps us up at night. Between illegal immigrants raping and murdering girls and women, and boys hijacking our daughters’ sports teams, stealing their college scholarships and changing in their locker rooms — we’ve not had much sleep over the last few years.

White suburban women started shifting toward Republicans two years ago, so it’s no big shock they voted for Trump. Unless of course you have a TV that’s permanently stuck on MSNBC, then you might be understandably confused.

The shift began around the time of Covid when we were all watching in real time the egregious government overreach and liberties being taken with our children at the expense of our parental rights. Our kids were locked out of school, forced to wear masks and sit a made up six-feet apart when they finally returned. 

While they were busy teaching our kids Critical Race Theory and inserting transgender policies in the classrooms, parents were labeled Domestic Terrorists for objecting and told to mind their own business. 

It was so brazen that in 2021 Glenn Youngkin was elected the first Republican governor in Virginia in 12 years, thanks largely to help from white suburban women — no bastion of conservatism in Virginia.

Add usurping parental rights to the laundry list of failures this administration left in its wake. Moms don’t forget when you mess with our kids.

In the days leading up to the election, Julia Roberts made a disastrous “useful idiot” ad, assuring us weak women that we’re allowed to vote for Kamala, and we don’t have to tell our husbands.

In the ad it may as well be 1900, except women can vote, and men aren’t really men, they’re the typical 21st century neanderthal buffoons that Hollywood typecasts. Clearly the ad never made its way to a focus group.

Perhaps that sort of dysfunction is prevalent in Hollywood, where the average marriage lasts about as long as it takes the ink to dry on the marriage license. Out here in the suburbs, or in most of the country that painted the map red on election night, being jerked around on a leash by our husband doesn’t rank very high on our list of concerns because it’s not our reality. 

Not like the girls we’re seeing murdered by illegal immigrants, the gender indoctrination of our kids, or the 28% sticker shock spike on groceries.

Of course, I doubt these Hollywood mouthpieces have seen the inside of a grocery store in the last four years. But they could probably direct you to the closest abortion clinic.

Kamala spent less than four months running for president, raised $1 billion and made it all disappear. Then she spent another $20 million she didn’t have — and the country still wasn’t with her. 

If this were Vegas it would be called betting the house while it’s burning, but since it’s the Harris campaign it’s the fiscal absurdity we’ve become accustomed to the last four years. 

One million dollars also went to Oprah — or Oprah’s studio, Harpo Studios — for Oprah’s endorsement. 

Maya Rudolph, in a mirror image skit with Harris on Saturday Night Live leading up to the election said, “We know each other so well…” That wraps up Kamala’s entire campaign in one soundbite. 

The Hollywood, entertainment, entitled celebrity class — those are her people. She made next to zero effort to exit her comfort zone and get to know women in the rest of the country, and it showed.

Instead, she chose to throw cash around like she’s Oprah for the Who’s Who of the entertainment industry — her people — to do her job for her.

It turns out the $20 million debt is also roughly the magic number the Harris campaign threw down the night before the election for star studded concerts in swing states. They hung their closing message to voters on the hopes that big name headliners like Jon Bon Jovi, Christina Aguilera, Katy Perry and Lady Gaga would lead them to the polls the next day.

Bon Jovi probably has no bigger fan base than Gen X white suburban women — my generation. My friends and I grew up listening to them, we have their songs on our playlists, we work out to their music.

However, there is no amount of star power that can tell people they haven’t lived through what they’ve lived through the last four years

Ultimately, this election cycle white suburban women decided “it’s our life.” And like “Frankie” said in that Bon Jovi song — we did it our way.

* * *

Lauren DeBellis Appell, a former lobbyist and communications aide on Capitol Hill, is a writer based in Fairfax, Virginia. Follow her on X @LDAppell.

The views expressed in this piece are those of the author and do not necessarily represent those of the Daily Wire.

​[#item_full_content]  

​[[{“value”:”

White suburban women — we drive minivans with “I used to be cool” stickers, we’re bffs with the Starbucks barista, and the over eager among us are presidents of our neighborhood associations, policing the shade of beige we just painted our front doors.

However, until last week, we were first and foremost an expected pro-abortion vote for Kamala — otherwise known as the Democrats’ ace in the hole. Democrats put all their marbles in an uninformed identity politics box, and it blew up in their face.

Opinions are formed by what people are experiencing. And white suburban women have experienced a whole lot of bad.

From gas to groceries — prices are higher on everything, and women tend to feel the pinch more because we generally take on more of these everyday responsibilities. 

The safety of our kids keeps us up at night. Between illegal immigrants raping and murdering girls and women, and boys hijacking our daughters’ sports teams, stealing their college scholarships and changing in their locker rooms — we’ve not had much sleep over the last few years.

White suburban women started shifting toward Republicans two years ago, so it’s no big shock they voted for Trump. Unless of course you have a TV that’s permanently stuck on MSNBC, then you might be understandably confused.

The shift began around the time of Covid when we were all watching in real time the egregious government overreach and liberties being taken with our children at the expense of our parental rights. Our kids were locked out of school, forced to wear masks and sit a made up six-feet apart when they finally returned. 

While they were busy teaching our kids Critical Race Theory and inserting transgender policies in the classrooms, parents were labeled Domestic Terrorists for objecting and told to mind their own business. 

It was so brazen that in 2021 Glenn Youngkin was elected the first Republican governor in Virginia in 12 years, thanks largely to help from white suburban women — no bastion of conservatism in Virginia.

Add usurping parental rights to the laundry list of failures this administration left in its wake. Moms don’t forget when you mess with our kids.

In the days leading up to the election, Julia Roberts made a disastrous “useful idiot” ad, assuring us weak women that we’re allowed to vote for Kamala, and we don’t have to tell our husbands.

In the ad it may as well be 1900, except women can vote, and men aren’t really men, they’re the typical 21st century neanderthal buffoons that Hollywood typecasts. Clearly the ad never made its way to a focus group.

Perhaps that sort of dysfunction is prevalent in Hollywood, where the average marriage lasts about as long as it takes the ink to dry on the marriage license. Out here in the suburbs, or in most of the country that painted the map red on election night, being jerked around on a leash by our husband doesn’t rank very high on our list of concerns because it’s not our reality. 

Not like the girls we’re seeing murdered by illegal immigrants, the gender indoctrination of our kids, or the 28% sticker shock spike on groceries.

Of course, I doubt these Hollywood mouthpieces have seen the inside of a grocery store in the last four years. But they could probably direct you to the closest abortion clinic.

Kamala spent less than four months running for president, raised $1 billion and made it all disappear. Then she spent another $20 million she didn’t have — and the country still wasn’t with her. 

If this were Vegas it would be called betting the house while it’s burning, but since it’s the Harris campaign it’s the fiscal absurdity we’ve become accustomed to the last four years. 

One million dollars also went to Oprah — or Oprah’s studio, Harpo Studios — for Oprah’s endorsement. 

Maya Rudolph, in a mirror image skit with Harris on Saturday Night Live leading up to the election said, “We know each other so well…” That wraps up Kamala’s entire campaign in one soundbite. 

The Hollywood, entertainment, entitled celebrity class — those are her people. She made next to zero effort to exit her comfort zone and get to know women in the rest of the country, and it showed.

Instead, she chose to throw cash around like she’s Oprah for the Who’s Who of the entertainment industry — her people — to do her job for her.

It turns out the $20 million debt is also roughly the magic number the Harris campaign threw down the night before the election for star studded concerts in swing states. They hung their closing message to voters on the hopes that big name headliners like Jon Bon Jovi, Christina Aguilera, Katy Perry and Lady Gaga would lead them to the polls the next day.

Bon Jovi probably has no bigger fan base than Gen X white suburban women — my generation. My friends and I grew up listening to them, we have their songs on our playlists, we work out to their music.

However, there is no amount of star power that can tell people they haven’t lived through what they’ve lived through the last four years

Ultimately, this election cycle white suburban women decided “it’s our life.” And like “Frankie” said in that Bon Jovi song — we did it our way.

* * *

Lauren DeBellis Appell, a former lobbyist and communications aide on Capitol Hill, is a writer based in Fairfax, Virginia. Follow her on X @LDAppell.

The views expressed in this piece are those of the author and do not necessarily represent those of the Daily Wire.

“}]] 

 

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