American Horror Story: Cult is saturated with progressive ideological elements that heavily shape its storytelling, transforming a horror anthology into a thinly veiled anti-Trump political screed. The plot kicks off on election night 2016 with protagonist Ally Mayfair-Richards, a white lesbian restaurant owner played by Sarah Paulson, suffering a breakdown over Trump's victory, her phobias exploited by cult leader Kai Anderson (Evan Peters), a clear Trump/MAGA parody who rallies misogynistic militiamen, incites anti-Hispanic violence, and targets Planned Parenthood. While attempting balance by showing both political sides forming cults, the narrative disproportionately demonizes right-wing extremism as fascist fear-mongering while glorifying feminist rebellion—Ally infiltrates, dismantles Kai's patriarchal cult, murders her wife, and rises to form her own 'nasty women' cult inspired by radical feminist Valerie Solanas (Lena Dunham), complete with green hoods and SCUM manifesto vibes, prefiguring #MeToo empowerment rhetoric. Casting reinforces this with a central lesbian family (Ally and Ivy), gay psychiatrist (Cheyenne Jackson), Black journalist (Adina Porter), and trans actor Chaz Bono, though mostly white ensemble avoids overt DEI backlash. Ryan Murphy's stated intent to allegorize election fallout and highlight 'ignored' groups under Trump underscores activist messaging, resulting in lecture-heavy dialogue on division, misogyny, and systemic fears that overshadow horror tropes like clowns and murders. Audience reactions split along political lines, with conservatives decrying anti-Trump bias and propaganda, diluting entertainment value into partisan cautionary tale that prioritizes ideology over coherent scares.