In 2016, NPR talked to 2 young Hillary fans. How do they feel after this election?

They showed up primed for victory, and dressed to party.

Jules Randell was 7 years old when Wellesley College grads, including Jules’ mom, gathered for what they believed would be a celebration of fellow alumna Hillary Clinton becoming the first female U.S. president on Election Night in 2016.

Jules picked out a flowy blue skirt, after learning that was the Democratic Party’s color, and topped it with a tiny T-shirt stamped with a big statement:

“Future president,” it read.

But that was the long game. Jules was definitely not aspiring to be the first to shatter that ultimate glass ceiling — that person “of course” was going to be Clinton, in just a matter of hours.

“I want to be the second,” Jules explained excitedly when questioned by this NPR reporter who was covering the event that night.

https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=1NFfTX_0wguR8Nr00
Smith first interviewed Jules and Bee, then 7 and 4, at a Wellesley College watch party for almuna Hillary Clinton on Election Night 2016. (Image by / Sarah Wall-Randell)

That election obviously didn’t go as Jules expected. And after former President Donald Trump again defeated a female Democratic nominee for president last week, we wondered about those youngest fans of Clinton and Vice President Harris and how they, in particular, were processing it all.

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