County music singer Jason Aldean’s song, “try that in a small town,” hit #1 on iTunes after being pulled from CMT Tuesday.

The video for the song was released on July 14, per Billboard, and began rotation on CMT on July 16. It was removed after backlash as some decried the video as “racist,” via the Western Journal.

Despite the controversy, fans are rallying around the song and have expressed support.

South Dakota Gov. Kristi Noem (R) posted a video expressing her thoughts on the situation.

She said, “I was so impressed with the song because it talked about the value of small towns and how we have our priorities right.”

“I am shocked by what I am seeing in this country with people trying to cancel the song and cancel Jason,” she added.

Rep. Lauren Boebart (R-Colo.) shared the news of the song’s success on iTunes and wrote, “Whenever they try and censor us, we only go stronger.”

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Country music star Travis Tritt stated, “I love the new @Jason_Aldean single.”

He went on to note, “This song isn’t promoting violence as some have suggested. It is simply expressing a point of view that many American people share which is against the obvious violence that we have seen from the likes of so many ‘activists groups’ in this country.” 

Even former President Donald Trump posted about the song on Truth Social.

@realDonaldTrumpView this post on Truth Social ↗

He said, “Jason Aldean is a fantastic guy who just came out with a great new song. Support Jason all the way. MAGA!!!”