like turkeys voting for Christmas
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used to refer to a situation where individuals or groups unknowingly support or participate in something that will ultimately bring harm or negative consequences to themselves
The idiom "like turkeys voting for Christmas" originated from the tradition of eating turkey as a Christmas meal, where turkeys are essentially voting for their own demise. The idiom is often used in a political context to describe situations where a group of people support a policy or politician that will ultimately harm them, such as when low-income voters support tax cuts for the wealthy or when workers support policies that lead to job losses.
- By the time they realized the truth, they had already been like turkeys voting for Christmas, and it was too late to change the outcome.
- If they vote for that bill, they'll be like turkeys voting for Christmas.
- The customers who keep buying from that company are like turkeys voting for Christmas; they're supporting a business that doesn't have their best interests in mind.
- The workers who voted for the layoffs were like turkeys voting for Christmas; they didn't realize they were voting against their own interests.