angel mom
English
Etymology
In 2000 the organization "Angel Moms" was founded, a group of mothers whose children had died, not limited to a specific cause.[1][2] In the second sense the term was introduced by Donald Trump on 31 August 2016 at the end of a speech about immigration.[2] He had mothers whose child was killed by an undocumented immigrant come on stage and tell their story.[3]
Noun
angel mom (plural angel moms)
- (US, informal, euphemistic) A mother whose child has died.
- (US, right-wing politics) A mother whose child was killed by an undocumented immigrant.
- Used other than figuratively or idiomatically: see angel, mom.
- 2009, Reva Jean Rohe, Adventures of Tomtom the Duck, AuthorHouse, →ISBN, page 10:
- After we talked about it, we decided to call her Angel Mom. She became Angel Mom to us, and she really was like an angel.
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References
- angelmoms.com, 2001: “Angel Moms is a group of mothers who have lost children. Through our pain, we have bonded together to offer each other love, support and understanding, something we need very much.”
- Tara Golshan (September 1, 2016), “Donald Trump introduced us to “angel moms.” Here’s why they matter.”, in vox.com: “Trump stood aside as one by one the parents — "angel moms" — shared stories of losing a son or daughter to an "illegal alien."”
- “Transcript: Donald Trump's full immigration speech, annotated”, in latimes.com, 31 August 2016: “These are really special people that I've gotten to know. I’m going to ask all the Angel Moms to come join me on the stage right now.”