Mysterious ‘Leaving MAGA’ billboards pop up around battleground Pennsylvania

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“Leaving MAGA” billboards that have popped up around central Pennsylvania are urging people to ditch the movement and are treating it like a disease – but it’s not clear who is paying for the PR blitz.

The eye-catching signs have been spotted around Lancaster, a Democratic-leaning city surrounded by rural communities that voted for President Trump.

They have also appeared in the conservative York County towns of York and Hanover and in Mechanicsburg.

Billboards touting the website LeavingMaga.org have appeared around Pennsylvania. But a voice mail listed on the billboard sounded like a private line, and calls weren’t returned. Leaving MAGA

Mystery surrounds who is paying for the signs.

The billboard lists a phone number and the name Andrew Miller.

But repeated messages left at the number weren’t returned.

A voicemail message says only, “I’ll get back to you when I can, thanks.”

And Rich Logis, the executive director of LeavingMAGA.org, the group whose name appears on the billboards, told The Post, “We didn’t pay for any of them.”

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.

Rich Logis, the executive director of LeavingMAGA.org, says he gave permission to another group who wanted to place the billboards. But he doesn’t know the person whose number is listed. leavingmaga.org

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.

Cold comfort. The organization has a support group facilitator and holds online meetings for friends and family. Leaving MAGA
The billboards have been spotted around Pennsylvania in Lancaster, York, Hanover, and Mechanicsburg. Leaving MAGA

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.

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