These lifelong Democrats are excited to vote for Donald Trump in 2024
They say Trump, “will make our lives so much easier”

Laura Hill, 51, cannot wait to cast her ballot for President of the United States on election day this year.
“I’m more excited to vote than I’ve ever been,” the mother of three from Clarksburg, West Virginia, said.
In the first election where the choice between right and wrong, good and bad, prosecutor and felon, could not be clearer, Hill is proud to pick the wrong, bad, felon.
“I’m voting for Donald J. Trump,” she says enthusiastically.
Hill thought she would be a lifelong Democrat but decided last week to vote for the Republican nominee for President for the very first time.
She is not alone. Hundreds-of-thousands of American women just like Hill are choosing the wealthy sexual predator over the accomplished career-woman in this year’s election.
Another such woman is Rosa Martinez, 43, of Santa Fe, New Mexico. She lives with her husband, three nieces, a nephew, and her elderly parents. She has never voted Republican but will do so this year.
“Me and my husband, we’re fed up with the cost of living. It is hard to pay the rent and keep food on the table for a family of eight on only two salaries. Thankfully, Trump has an incredible plan that will make our lives so much easier,” Martinez said.
Speaking at a Moms for Liberty event in Washington, D.C., on August 30, Trump unveiled his plan is to offer gender-affirming medical and surgical care in the nation’s public schools.
“The transgender thing is incredible. Think of it. Your kid goes to school and comes home a few days later with an operation. The school decides what’s going to happen with your child.”
Hill and Martinez are public school teachers who stand to benefit greatly from Trump’s gender-affirming care policy because it calls for classroom teachers to become qualified surgeons.
Hill and Martinez are both excited about how that would change their profession.
“Performing top surgeries in my classroom would be life-changing for me and my family because I’d be making bank,” Martinez said, noting that most surgeons earn a high six-figure salary.
The thought of earning a salary like that excites Hill, who said, “If I could make that kind of money, I would definitely stay in the classroom and stop thinking about becoming the assistant manager of the Walmart in Buckhannon.”
But Hill, who has a master’s degree in education and has 25 years experience as a classroom teacher, does not make that kind of money. Despite her advanced training and wealth of experience, she earned only $59,958 last year.
That is why Hill, Martinez, and many of the estimated 3.2 million public school teachers in the United States believe they are overworked, undervalued, and underpaid.
“That all ends when Americans send President Trump back to the White House. His plan will restore honor and prestige to the teaching profession and transform schools into safe spaces where children can get both their medical care and education needs met,” Trump campaign spokesperson Steven Cheung said.
That is music to the ears of educators like Hill and Martinez, who argue that a nation is only as good as its school.
“To make America great again, we have to make education great again, and Trump has the plan that will do just that,” Hill said.
Martinez agrees.
“MEGA-MAGA will finally let me and my family live the American dream.”