DOCUMENTARY HISTORY · 2015 – 2025

THE RISE OF MAGA

From a campaign announcement to a political identity that reshaped the Republican Party and American elections. A neutral, fact-based decade in review.

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KEY METRICS

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Electoral votes
2016 victory
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Popular votes
2020 (record for incumbent)
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2024 return
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2024 (popular vote won)
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Years of active
MAGA movement
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Presidential elections
won (2016, 2024)
JUN 16, 2015

The Escalator

On June 16, 2015, Donald Trump descended the escalator at Trump Tower in New York City to announce his presidential campaign. The slogan "Make America Great Again," with roots in Ronald Reagan's 1980 run, became the movement's banner. The red "MAGA" baseball cap emerged immediately as its defining visual icon.

PRIMARY + GENERAL

The Upset

Trump won the Republican primary over a field of 16 major candidates, defeating establishment figures across the GOP. On November 8, 2016, he defeated Democratic nominee Hillary Clinton in the general election, winning the Electoral College 304 to 227. Clinton won the national popular vote by roughly 2.9 million; Trump prevailed through key margins in Pennsylvania, Michigan, and Wisconsin.

Trump — 306 EC / 46.1%
62,984,828 votes
Clinton — 232 EC / 48.2%
65,853,514 votes
THE FIRST TERM

The Presidency

The 45th presidency began January 20, 2017. Major domestic actions included the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act of 2017, the largest tax overhaul since 1986; the confirmation of three Supreme Court justices and more than 200 federal judges; and sustained focus on immigration enforcement and border security. Rallies continued throughout the term as a primary organizing and direct-communication format.

NOVEMBER 2020

Election Loss

On November 3, 2020, Joe Biden defeated Trump, winning the Electoral College 306 to 232 and receiving the largest popular-vote total in U.S. history to that point. Trump and allies contested the results through more than 60 legal challenges; courts, including those with Trump-appointed judges, consistently rejected the legal arguments. State officials certified the results; Congress certified them January 7, 2021.

Trump — 232 EC / 46.8%
74,216,154 votes
Biden — 306 EC / 51.3%
81,268,924 votes
JANUARY 6, 2021

The Capitol Breach

On January 6, 2021, during the joint session of Congress meeting to certify Electoral College results, a large crowd assembled in Washington, D.C. Following a rally near the White House, a portion of the crowd moved to the U.S. Capitol. A breach occurred: rioters entered the building, temporarily halting the certification. The Capitol was secured that evening; certification proceeded overnight, confirming Biden's election.

NOVEMBER 2022

The Midterms

In the 2022 midterm elections, MAGA-aligned candidates performed unevenly. Republicans won a narrow House majority of 222 to 213, enabling oversight investigations. Several high-profile MAGA-endorsed Senate and gubernatorial candidates in swing states were defeated, falling short of the widely predicted "red wave." Trump announced his 2024 presidential campaign on November 15, 2022.

PRIMARY + GENERAL

Return to Power

Trump dominated the 2024 Republican primary, winning 14 of the first 15 contests and effectively clinching the nomination by mid-March. On November 5, 2024, he defeated Vice President Kamala Harris, who had replaced Biden as the Democratic nominee in July, winning the Electoral College 312 to 226 and the national popular vote. Trump was inaugurated as the 47th President on January 20, 2025.

Trump — 312 EC / 49.8%
77,284,118 votes
Harris — 226 EC / 48.3%
75,019,451 votes
MOVEMENT ARCHITECTURE

Consistent Threads

The Red Hat

The "MAGA" cap became one of the decade's most recognized and contested political symbols, functioning as identity marker and cultural reference point across media and public life.

Rally Culture

Large-format rallies in arenas and airfields served as the movement's primary organizing format, media events, and direct-communication channel throughout 2015 to 2025.

Populist Framing

The movement consistently positioned itself against what it characterized as a failing political and media establishment, appealing to voters who felt poorly served by existing institutions.

GOP Realignment

The MAGA movement reshaped the Republican coalition: the working-class and rural base grew in influence as traditional establishment conservatives and suburban college-educated voters declined in relative weight.