Make America Great Again

Make America Great Again

Donald Trump's presidential campaign slogan. Often abbreviated as "MAGA." President Trump's supporters often use his campaign slogan, "Make America Great Again."
See also: again, America, great, make
Farlex Dictionary of Idioms.
See also:
  • America
  • MAGA
  • and then some
  • announce for
  • a point of honor
  • a point of honour
  • a point of pride
  • collaborate
  • collaborate with
  • collaborate with (someone or something)
References in periodicals archive
At first blush, this would seem to vindicate US President Donald Trump, who came to office pledging to "Make America Great Again." A stronger dollar could be taken to mean that his pro-growth economic policies are working.
And yes, together, we will make America great again. Thank you.
"We have gone forward with a clear vision and a righteous mission," he said, "to make America great again for all Americans." And in saying so he backed off all his domestic adversaries including the media.
His presidential campaign's motto "Make America Great Again" did not refer only to Americans, but he kept claiming that 'making America great again' can be only achieved when America closes its doors for refugees and migrants.
IMMIGRANTSThat is no way to make America great again when it needs workers to drain the swamp and clean the place.Africans constitute 4.
Raphael Warnock also took issue with Trumps campaign slogan to "Make America Great Again."
That brings us to the understanding of Trump as the beholder of the promise to his nation: Make America Great Again. Restore lost American prestige in the changing world of the 21st century.
The American president is all out to 'Make America Great Again' in his own particular way: full of hatred, aggression and bullying dominance directed at will against all at home and abroad unless the world is prepared to do what the Pakistani Air Force Chief recently said: If a US drone flies over Pakistan, we will shoot it down.
Taking the lead from President Donald Trump, the political case for tax cuts is that they are essential to "make America great again." Over-taxed and cheated by bad trade deals, goes the argument, America needs tax relief to revive its competitive prowess.
This political moment exemplifies a contest over masculinity, over who qualifies as a "real man." Donald Trump's promise to "Make America great again" was, according to sociologist Arlie Hochschild, in many ways a promise to " 'Make men great again,' too - both fist-pounding, gun-toting guy-guys and high-flying entrepreneurs.
Thanks to the success of "Make America Great Again" as a call for a return to the times when white people ruled, and thanks to the widespread analysis of voters' preferences in racial terms, white identity became marked as a racial identity.
For Trump supporters embracing the social dimension of "Make America Great Again," their vote enacted a visceral "No!" to multicultural America.
"Trump is a loud, self-promoting businessman who is pro-money, pro-market, and wants to "Make America Great Again" -- a motto which is printed across the red cap that Trump wears when he is campaigning.
Is it too late to make America great again? That is the question Alan Wolfe asks in Return to Greatness: How America Lost Its Sense of Purpose and What It Needs to Do to Recover It.
Joshi, co-founder of Sivvr, was blocked by Trump after responding to the president's "Make America Great Again" tweet on June 1.