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Billboards with the bold message “Leaving MAGA” have emerged across central Pennsylvania, urging locals to abandon the movement as if it were a contagion. Despite their striking presence, the financial backers behind this public relations campaign remain shrouded in mystery.
These conspicuous billboards have been primarily spotted in Lancaster, a city with Democratic inclinations encircled by rural areas that supported former President Trump. Additionally, the signs have appeared in conservative locales such as York County’s York and Hanover, as well as in Mechanicsburg.
The enigma of who is funding these signs deepens with the billboard’s listed contact information—a phone number under the name Andrew Miller. However, numerous attempts to reach out via this number have gone unanswered.
Callers are greeted with a simple voicemail stating, “I’ll get back to you when I can, thanks,” offering no further clues.
Rich Logis, executive director of LeavingMAGA.org, the organization named on the billboards, clarified to The Post, “We didn’t pay for any of them.” He mentioned granting approval to a group interested in erecting billboards statewide, adding, “They want to remain anonymous. But I don’t know who Andrew is,” leaving the true sponsor’s identity still a mystery.
He did give the OK to a group wanting to post billboards around the state. “They want to remain anonymous. But I don’t know who Andrew is,” he said.
Logis said the group is planning four more billboards in red areas. His site touts a “support group for those affected by a loved one’s MAGA affiliation.”
A former conservative podcaster based in Florida who previously lived in Yonkers, the two-time Trump voter says he was an “unapologetic Trump and MAGA supporter” before turning away from the movement.
Logis claims the group helped two dozen people leave MAGA and that 40-50 joined online groups. “It is a place where people can find better ways to navigate their relationships and relieve themselves of the pressure that they can change their MAGA close friend or loved one,” Logis said.
A March 2025 NBC News poll showed more than a third of registered voters consider themselves part of MAGA.