Beyoncé and Springsteen headline for Kamala Harris, Trump backers feel a complex mix of anger and envy over celebrity endorsements.
As Kamala Harris rallies across the country with stars like Beyoncé and Bruce Springsteen at her side, former President Donald Trump and his supporters face a wave of frustration—and perhaps a hint of envy. During a rally in Traverse City, Michigan, Trump pointedly told his crowd, “Kamala is at a dance party with Beyoncé,” drawing boos and laughter as he stretched the superstar’s name for effect.
For days, famous faces have been showing up in support of Vice President Harris, from Eminem in Michigan to James Taylor in North Carolina and a powerhouse lineup in Texas and Georgia. The sight of Hollywood and music icons championing the Democratic campaign underscores a tension long felt by Trump and his followers. As a former TV star himself, Trump understands the allure of celebrity endorsement, but for his supporters, these stars represent an elite that they see as out of touch and antagonistic to their values.

Trump’s crowd in Las Vegas reflected this divide as they gathered at a college stadium to hear from their own lineup of supporters, including racecar driver Danica Patrick and actor Gina Carano, who spoke about her experiences facing Hollywood backlash. For Trump’s base, aligning with figures like Carano and the outspoken Elon Musk, a recent Trump supporter, signals a distinct pushback against the entertainment elite. Musk, especially, has become a rallying point; the crowd erupted in cheers when Carano mentioned him as a funder for her legal battles.
Yet some Trump fans feel resentment toward stars supporting Harris. Kim Kinsman, a retiree from Las Vegas, was quick to dismiss celebrities like Julia Roberts and Beyoncé, accusing them of being out of touch with everyday struggles like high gas prices and grocery costs. The sentiment resonates among many, who view the Harris-aligned celebrities as part of a distant, unrelatable elite.
Trump supporters argue that Harris’s reliance on Hollywood faces signals weakness, a move they saw fail for Hillary Clinton in 2016. As Trump put it in Vegas, “Kamala has just absolutely bombed,” poking fun at Harris’s events even while admitting a flicker of curiosity. “I wanted to watch that first,” he joked, “isn’t that terrible?” This cycle of political tension and Hollywood friction has only deepened the cultural divide, revealing just how much Trump’s base rejects—and sometimes resents—the A-list endorsements drawing crowds for his opponents.
