Lauren Jauregui accuses Elon Musk of attempting to interfere with upcoming elections by “destroying Twitter”:
“This place was one of our most effective organizing tools during 2020 and is where a lot of discourse and accountability happens. Please understand nothing these billionaires do is ever a coincidence.“
In an open letter obtained exclusively by PEOPLE, the pop singer, 20, urges fans to “take action” following an executive order the president signed on Friday and immediately took affect (and caused confusion and protests) at airports across the country. On Saturday night, a federal court judge issued a stay to temporarily block Trump’s ban, ordering that refugees and other immigrants stuck at American airports should not be sent back to their home countries.
Jauregui’s open letter is just the not the first time the Cuban-American singer has weighed in on politics.
In November, she came out as bisexual in a note directed to Trump voters. And on Jan. 21, she participated in the Women’s March on Washington, telling Nylon afterward: “I’m marching for human rights in general, because the upcoming administration has clearly made a statement about who they support and what kind of regime they intend to instill. I’m marching for women, I’m marching for the LGBT community, I’m marching for immigrants. I happen to fall into all three categories, so I’m marching for myself at the end of the day and for my family and my friends.
Lauren Jauregui of the pop quintet Fifth Harmony penned an open letter to Donald Trump supporters, calling them out for adversely affecting the nation with their vote and ignoring a wide swath of the nation.
Jauregui, 20, took to Billboard for the lengthy post that is equal parts deliberate and cutting. “To every single Trump supporter trying to say that voting for Trump does not mean that you are racist, homophobic, sexist, xenophobic, assholes… that you just like the way he didn’t really care what people thought and just said whatever he wanted …” she began, “Your words are worthless, because your actions have led to the single-handed destruction of all the progress we’ve made socially as a nation. … You are HYPOCRITES.”
Before the election, Jauregui was passionate in trying to get new voters out to the polls and was an outspoken proponent of Democratic nominee Hillary Clinton.
Jauregui’s open letter is just the not the first time the Cuban-American singer has weighed in on politics.
In November, she came out as bisexual in a note directed to Trump voters. And on Jan. 21, she participated in the Women’s March on Washington, telling Nylon afterward: “I’m marching for human rights in general, because the upcoming administration has clearly made a statement about who they support and what kind of regime they intend to instill. I’m marching for women, I’m marching for the LGBT community, I’m marching for immigrants. I happen to fall into all three categories, so I’m marching for myself at the end of the day and for my family and my friends.
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