get on the bandwagon
get on the bandwagon
To join, follow, or support someone or something only after it is successful or popular. I can't stand these people who just get on the bandwagon after a win. Where were they last year when the team was terrible? A: "I thought your mom hated that candidate." B: "Well, he's the president now, so she decided to get on the bandwagon."
See also: bandwagon, get, on
Farlex Dictionary of Idioms.
on the bandwagon, get
Also, climb or hop or jump on the bandwagon . Join a cause or movement, as in More and more people are getting on the bandwagon to denounce cigarette smoking. This expression alludes to a horse-drawn wagon carrying a brass band, used to accompany candidates on campaign tours in the second half of the 1800s. By about 1900 it was extended to supporting a campaign or other cause.
See also: get, on
The American Heritage® Dictionary of Idioms by Christine Ammer.
on the bandwagon, to get/climb/hop
To join the cause, movement, or party. The original bandwagon was a horse-drawn wagon bearing a brass band, used in a circus parade. In the second half of the nineteenth century such wagons began to be used in political campaigns as well, accompanying a candidate on speech-making tours. During William Jennings Bryan’s presidential campaign of 1900 the term began to be extended to mean supporting the movement itself. It also was used in Britain: “The Mirror . . . does not jump on bandwagons . . . it isn’t, never has been, and never will be a tin can tied to a political party’s tail” (Daily Mirror, 1966; cited by William Safire).
See also: climb, get, hop, on
The Dictionary of Clichés by Christine Ammer
- on the bandwagon, get
- on the bandwagon, to get/climb/hop
- bandwagon
- climb on the bandwagon
- climb/jump on the bandwagon
- jump on the bandwagon
- leap on the bandwagon
- follow out
- after
- after (someone or something)