. >> reporter: chase overholt works for positive images, a santa rosa-based nonprofit that offers support for young people struggling with identity issues. chase believes the trump campaign attracted people angry about aspects of their lives they could not control. >> they're pushed down by systems they can't control and they might not be able to name. so instead it's easier to find someone and vilify them in a way that makes you feel you've got a leg up on somebody at least and in doing that, they feel a little bit more powerful. >> reporter: beth bourne would probably disagree. over the weekend she traveled from davis to san francisco to join a small group of trump supporters at a large anti-trump rally in the mission district. she said it was the transgender issue that changed her mind. >> for the first time i've been voting red because it's actually the republicans that want to protect girls and women from the idea that anybody can call themselves a transgender woman, which is a man. this should not be a political issue. girls, boys, they're harmed by this ideology. >> reporter: but i