What do you get the Trump supporter who has everything? This surreal MAGA hat will do

 

 October 16, 2024

What do you get the Trump supporter who has everything? This surreal MAGA hat will do

The MAGA hat has come full circle.

BY Hunter Schwarz

For the latest edition of former President Donald Trump’s Make America Great Again hat, his campaign is going meta. The $40 “Little Red MAGA Hat” shows an image of a classic red MAGA hat on the front, and a U.S. flag and Trump’s secondary slogan, “Never Surrender,” on the sides. Trump’s campaign also sells a matching white $36 MAGA-hat tee to complete the set.

What do you get the Trump supporter who has everything? This surreal MAGA hat will do | DeviceDaily.com
[Photo: Trump Campaign]

A universe of MAGA hats

The MAGA hat will be 10 years old next summer, but its continued popularity among Trump supporters shows that the campaign still finds value in its most famous merch. Trump first wore a MAGA hat in summer 2015 when he announced his candidacy. His son-in-law, Jared Kushner, wrote in his memoir that the campaign eventually sold as much as $80,000 worth of hats a day in 2016.

By Election Day 2016, Trump’s campaign sold the hat in just three styles: red, white, and camouflage. By 2020, that number had grown to nine different styles. By then, Trump had gone all-in on hats with a “Keep America Great” hat for Trump’s short-lived 2020 slogan, as well as MAGA hats that just had the initials instead of writing out the full slogan. There were “MAGA Mama” hats and hats that said make “Farmers” and “Space” great again. There have been limited-edition holiday editions for Easter, Christmas, and Halloween. (The campaign did not reply to a request for comment on its hat strategy.)

The political-branding lifespan

The shelf life of a successful two-time presidential campaign brand is about six years, if you consider candidates typically announce their campaign the year before an election and run for reelection five years later. For Trump, who’s been running for president for nearly a decade now, the longtime visual markers of his campaign—from the red hats and the long red tie to his boxy campaign logo—are ancient in political-branding years.

 
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Yet, Trump’s campaign has found ways to refresh old signifiers and create new ones, like updating his campaign logo and introducing a secondary “Never Surrender” black-and-white logo to go along with a darker us-versus-them message of revenge that Trump has campaigned on in this election cycle. His campaign has also emphasized and raised money off imagery of his mug shot and raised fist after the assassination attempt. The Little Red MAGA Hat is another example of branding diversification.

 This is what MAGA 2024 looks like.


ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Hunter Schwarz is Fast Company contributor who covers the intersection of design and advertising, branding, business, civics, fashion, fonts, packaging, politics, sports, and technology.. Hunter is the author of Yello, a newsletter about political persuasion 


Fast Company

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