It’s a rule many families still swear by: don’t talk politics at the dinner table. And for good reason. Political opinions can be deeply personal — and sometimes, they can shatter family bonds entirely.
Couldn’t even look at her husband
Author Andrea Tate shared her story in HuffPost last year, describing how her husband’s support for Donald Trump turned the holiday season into a battlefield.
Even before election day, Andrea knew her husband had voted Republican, and he knew she had voted Democratic.
But when Trump’s victory became official after the November election, everything changed. Andrea found herself unable to leave her bed, doomscrolling through social media and occasionally unfriending people who hadn’t voted for the Democrat candidate.
Then she saw it — a post from her husband celebrating Trump’s win:
”God Bless America. God bless #45, 47.”
”It had a few likes, and a few commenters joined him in his celebration. He was downstairs in the kitchen making coffee, and I was upstairs avoiding him. I couldn’t talk to him — or even look at him,” Andrea wrote.
Thanksgiving and Christmas… cancelled
Instead, she sent him a message:
”Take the post down out of respect for me and all my liberal writer friends.”
But she didn’t stop there.
Looking ahead to Thanksgiving and Christmas, she added:
”Also, tell your family I love them, but I will not be coming for Thanksgiving, and I won’t be hosting Christmas. I need space.”
Later that day, after her husband tried to ease the tension with a coffee and reassurances, Andrea finally spoke to him:
”I am sorry about the holidays, but I cannot bite my tongue like I did with Hillary,” she said. ”I don’t want to disrespect your parents or your brother and his family in their home, or our home, so it’s best this way. No scenes. You can go see them. Seriously – I will not be in a room of 15 people who voted for Trump.”
For many, this might seem extreme.
But Andrea explains her stance as a moral boundary she couldn’t cross.
”I will not unwrap gifts given to me by people who voted for a party that has talked about building internment camps and mass deportation,” she wrote. She added that she ”will not pass the turkey” to those who, in her view, supported taking away women’s reproductive rights or harming vulnerable communities.
“I know he is a good man..”
Andrea was surprised that her husband didn’t argued about the change in holiday plans. Normally, it would have been a major point of contention given how close he was to his family.
Somewhere inside, he seemed to understand what the election outcome meant to her. She recognized his empathy and felt grateful for it. She held onto that sense of understanding like a life raft as she tried to figure out how they would move forward with their marriage.
“I know he is a good man and he would do anything for a family member or friend, which makes what he has done even more infuriating and even more painful,” she wrote.
Despite all the intense emotions and Andrea’s firm decisions, her husband didn’t argue with her choice or remove the post.

She had wanted to say something that might make him undo what she saw as a mistake, but she knew that if her words were too demanding, or her voice too filled with anger, it would achieve nothing.
”I also knew I couldn’t change what had happened — only what happens now. Only what I do now. What I refuse to accept and what I promise to keep fighting for. And to do it all with honesty and love and, yes, anger, too,” Andrea shared.
Andrea’s story isn’t just about one family’s fractured holidays — it’s a mirror of the deep political divides shaping homes across the country.
When do personal values outweigh tradition? Should love and family ties survive political disagreement, or are some differences too big to bridge?
As families sit down to their next holiday meal, these questions are more pressing than ever. Where do you draw the line — and could a single post really change the course of your relationships?
READ MORE
- Jeffrey Epstein’s brother makes huge claim about why Trump is releasing the files
- Trump snaps at female reporter in furious outburst: “Be quiet, piggy”