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Kamala Harris supporter Sally Field trashes campaign sign after Donald Trump victory


Sally Field did not get what she wanted for her birthday.

The actress, who turned 78 on Wednesday, was seen outside her home in Los Angeles the morning after the presidential election, disposing of a sign in support of Vice President Kamala Harris and her running mate, Governor Tim Walz of Minnesota.

The “Steel Magnolias” star also trashed a sign that read, “Vote pro-choice, pro-equality, pro-democracy by November 5.”

SALLY FIELD OPENS UP ABOUT ‘HORRIFIC’ ABORTION AS TEEN IN ENDORSEMENT FOR HARRIS

Sally Field was seen ripping out her Harris-Walz sign outside her Los Angeles home on her 78th birthday. (GPRESS / MEGA)

Sally Field holds up a Harris-Walz sign that was previously stuck in the ground

Sally Field looked casual in sweatpants and a button-down shirt, as she removed a Harris-Walz sign from her property. (GPRESS / MEGA)

Sally Field with pumpkins in the background walks with a Harris-Walz sign to the trash

Sally Field was seen carrying two signs toward the garbage. (GPRESS / MEGA)

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Field emerged from her home looking comfortable, wearing sweatpants and a button-down shirt. With her hair in braids and airpods secured to her ears, she looked like she was ready to get down to business, ripping the signs out from the ground and walking to the garbage and recycling bins on the street.

A representative for Field did not immediately respond to Fox News Digital’s request for comment.

Sally Field holds two signs, one for Harris-Walz and another promoting pro-choice and democracy

Sally Field also held a sign that said, “Vote pro-choice, pro-equality, pro-democracy by November 5.” (GPRESS / MEGA)

Sally Field lifts the recycling bin to trash a Harris-Walz sign

Sally Field disposes of her Harris-Walz sign in the recycling bin outside her home. (GPRESS / MEGA)

On Tuesday, Field and her son, Sam, both of whom donned Harris-Walz gear, encouraged people to get out and vote. “Whether you’re a Democrat, a Republican or an Independent – vote for Democracy, for human rights, for women’s rights, for sanity, for hope, for @kamalaharris & @timwalz,” she wrote to Instagram.

Sally Field in a black shirt and bottoms throws up a piece sign with her son Sam and two dogs

Sally Field and her son Sam posed for a photograph on election day, encouraging people to vote for Vice President Kamala Harris and Governor Tim Walz. (Sally Field Instagram)

Field initially endorsed the current vice president last month while simultaneously making a vulnerable admission about her youth. In an emotional video shared to Instagram, Field revealed that when she was 17 years old, she had an abortion in Mexico.

“I’ve been so hesitant to do this, to tell my horrific story,” she captioned the video. “It was during a time even worse than now. A time when contraception was not readily available, and only if you were married. But I feel that so many women of my generation went through similar, traumatic events, and I feel stronger when I think of them. I believe, like me, they must want to fight for their grandchildren and all the young women of this country.

“It’s one of the reasons why so many of us are supporting Kamala Harris and Tim Walz. Everyone, please, pay attention to this election, up and down the ballot, in every state – especially those with ballot initiatives that could protect reproductive freedom. PLEASE. WE CAN’T GO BACK!!”

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Field explained that at the time, she had just graduated from high school and “had nothing,” including a lack of financial or emotional support from family. When she found out she was pregnant, a friend of the family, who was also a doctor, drove her down to Tijuana to have the procedure. On the journey, she was also accompanied by the doctor’s wife and her mother.

“It was beyond hideous and you know, life-altering,” she explained, saying she went without an anesthetic, only given “a few puffs of ether” by a technician, which made her extremities numb. “But I felt everything of how much pain I was in, and then I realized the technician was actually molesting me. So I had to figure out how can I make my arms move to push him away.”

Field remembers feeling “this absolute pit of shame” from the whole experience, and that when the procedure was finished, she was rushed out. “They didn’t want me there . . . it was illegal.”

Sally Field in a tan jacket speaks into the microphone on stage and puts her fingers together

Sally Field shared a “horrific story” about what she endured to get an abortion when she was a teenager. (Frazer Harrison/Getty Images)

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Field says months later she started auditioning for acting roles and “by the end of that year, I was ‘Gidget.’ I was the quintessential All-American, girl-next-door.”

She says in reality, that was an accurate depiction of herself, “because so many women – my generation of women, were going through this. And these are the things women are going through now. . . . It’s beyond how you can go back to that. And do that to our little girls and our young women and not have respect and regard for their health and their own decisions, about whether they feel they’re able to give birth to a child at that time.”

Sally Field in a black lacy dress and black framed glasses smiles and looks slightly up at the Screen Actors Guild Awards

Sally Field expressed the importance of not going back to the way things were when she was a teenager. (Frazer Harrison/Getty Images)

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Since the overturn of Roe v. Wade in 2022, 13 states have enacted a total abortion ban with minimal exceptions, while 28 others have restrictions based on gestational duration.

President-elect Donald Trump said throughout his campaign that abortion should be regulated at the state level.

Donald Trump in a bluue suit and red tie pumps his fist in the air and looks up

Donald Trump has said that abortion regulations should be decided by individual states. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon)





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