The News (New Glasgow)

Halifax student compiles Trump voters’ regrets for massive Twitter audience

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A Nova Scotia university student who has been collecting tweets of disillusio­ned Donald Trump voters has attracted quite a celebrity following, including billionair­e Mark Cuban, sworn Trump-nemesis Rosie O’Donnell and Hollywood personalit­ies Olivia Wilde and Chaz Bono.

Erica Baguma, a 23-year-old social anthropolo­gy student at University of King’s College in Halifax, created the @Trump-Regrets Twitter account last November.

The idea came to her while scrolling through social media to see how Trump supporters were reacting to the presidente­lect’s reversal on his campaign promise to appoint a special prosecuter to look into Democratic rival Hillary Clinton’s use of a private email server.

Baguma started retweeting Trump voters’ misgivings about his unorthodox social media use, dismissal of U.S. intelligen­ce reports that Russia had meddled in the 2016 election and wealthy cabinet picks that some felt contradict­ed his pledge to “drain the swamp” in Washington.

She’s now picked up some 186,000 followers. Other notables include actor Adam Pally and television producer Dan Harmon.

Baguma says the chorus of Trump defectors grew around inaugurati­on day as it became clear that Trump’s rhetoric on the campaign trail was not just bluster and he intended to follow through on plans to repeal government-subsidized health insurance under the Affordable Care Act, more commonly known as “Obamacare.”

Baguma says interest in the account surged as several of the celebrity followers latched on. Democratic member of North Carolina’s Senate Jeff Jackson tweeted that the account was proof that “people can change.”

Baguma says Trump diehards have lashed out at the account as a “smear campaign” and have accused her of fabricatin­g the thousands of retweets for political purposes, even though some of the original accounts date back years.

While Trump detractors have relished the tweets as affirmatio­n of their pre-existing beliefs, Baguma says contrite Trump voters have also found solace in knowing they’re not alone.

Baguma, who was born in Uganda, says that as a woman of colour, she felt personally targeted by Trump’s characteri­zation of black Americans as “nothing more than perpetrato­rs and victims of inner-city violence.”

She says the account has given her a new perspectiv­e on Trump supporters as a diverse coalition of voters who may have overlooked his more inflammato­ry statements because they believed he was looking out for the country’s best interest.

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