The fallout from the endorsement has been swift (pun intended), with ticket sales for the Eras Tour plummeting to an all-time low. For a woman who once commanded the attention of millions of fans who would camp outside stadiums just to catch a glimpse of her glittering microphone, selling only 2,000 tickets is nothing short of shocking.
Fans who had eagerly awaited the Eras Tour, ready to belt out “Love Story” in unison with thousands of strangers, are now finding themselves second-guessing their loyalty. “I just can’t separate the music from the politics anymore,” one disgruntled former fan wrote in an online forum. “I was here for 1989 and Reputation, not for political endorsements. Now I feel like every song is a campaign slogan.”
Another fan, who requested a refund for her VIP package, commented, “I loved Taylor for her music, not her political opinions. I’m not spending hundreds of dollars to watch her promote a candidate I don’t support.”
It’s become clear that the Eras Tour backlash is more than just about politics—it’s a full-blown Swiftie civil war. Fandoms are rarely known for their subtlety, and Taylor’s fanbase is no exception. Social media has been flooded with debates, arguments, and fan fights that make even the wildest Reddit threads seem tame.