Los Angeles teacher Laura McCutcheon on Tuesday night gathered with like-minded friends for what she thought would be a celebration of US Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Rodham Clinton’s victory.
The polls had been favorable in recent days and the party at a home in Los Angeles’ hilly Echo Park neighborhood began festively.
However, by 10pm, the gathering was feeling more like a wake, as one state after another went to Republican rival Donald Trump.
Photo: AFP
McCutcheon said she was left struggling to understand what had happened.
“I had worried there were voters out there the polls were not catching, but I cannot understand how people think Trump is the solution,” she said. “If they are disgusted with the system, how is he the alternative?”
In some of the US’ most Democratic enclaves, Clinton supporters reported feeling blindsided by Trump’s victory. They fretted about how they had been so wrong and wondered how they would cope during the next four years.
In Las Vegas, local resident Mary Durgram was near despair.
“For the first time in my life, I’m ashamed to be American and I never thought I would say that,” she said at a local resort and casino. “I’m a veteran, I served my country for a lot of years and I’m ashamed of my fellow Americans tonight.”
In San Francisco, Joey Nunez, 29, said he was having trouble processing what had happened.
“The shocking realization is that this is what people wanted. They wanted Trump,” he said. “After everything he said, how could he get people to buy into his brand?”
Nunez, who works as a clinical lab scientist, said he and his wife had spent the evening in shock.
“We just can’t consider him our president,” he said. “It is just too surreal.”
In the Los Angeles suburb of Glendale, California, children’s author Amy Goldman Koss said she started the day by donning a pantsuit in solidarity with Clinton and went to the polls with her adult daughter to participate in what they thought would be an historic moment: electing the US’ first woman president.
“It feels humiliating on several fronts,” 62-year-old Koss said. “How much we miscalculated, how pissed off the Trump voters were. It didn’t matter what the hell he said.”
Many Clinton backers talked about how their social media feeds had been filled with support for Clinton and that they had little contact with Trump voters in an increasingly polarized political climate.
Deena Pioli, an attorney from San Francisco’s Outer Sunset neighborhood, said she rarely ran into people who were not supporting Clinton and that she now regrets that.
“Those of us here in San Francisco and California should not be so safe in our bubble,” she said.
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