Illustration depicting Donald Trump's deleted social media post with racist Obama video and ensuing backlash notifications.
Illustration depicting Donald Trump's deleted social media post with racist Obama video and ensuing backlash notifications.
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Trump shares video with racist depiction of the Obamas, then deletes it after backlash

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Imethibitishwa ukweli

President Donald Trump posted a third-party video on social media late Thursday that ended with a racist depiction of former President Barack Obama and former first lady Michelle Obama as apes. The post was removed about 12 hours later after criticism from Democrats, civil rights groups and several Republicans, including Sen. Tim Scott of South Carolina.

President Donald Trump posted a video to his Truth Social account late Thursday that included a racist depiction of former President Barack Obama and former first lady Michelle Obama as apes. The video was deleted about 12 hours later after a wave of criticism.

Sen. Tim Scott of South Carolina, who leads Senate Republicans’ campaign arm and is the Senate’s only Black Republican, publicly condemned the post on X. “Praying it was fake because it’s the most racist thing I’ve seen out of this White House,” Scott wrote, adding that the president “should remove it.”

The White House sought to defuse the controversy, with press secretary Karoline Leavitt describing the clip as part of an “internet meme video” portraying Trump as the “king of the jungle” and dismissing the response as “fake outrage,” according to statements reported by multiple outlets. A White House official later told reporters the post had been made in error by a staffer.

Speaking to reporters the next day, Trump said he had watched only the beginning of the video and had not seen the offensive ending before it was posted. He declined to apologize, saying he “didn’t make a mistake,” while also saying he condemned the racist imagery.

Other Republicans also criticized the post. Rep. Mike Lawler of New York called it “incredibly offensive” and urged its deletion and an apology, while Sen. Roger Wicker of Mississippi described the clip as “totally unacceptable,” according to reports.

The episode added to scrutiny of Trump’s social media activity and his long record of racially charged controversies, while prompting renewed debate over how quickly the White House addresses offensive content shared by the president’s accounts.

Watu wanasema nini

X discussions on Trump's sharing and deletion of a video depicting the Obamas as apes revealed polarized views. Critics condemned it as racist, citing historical dehumanization and backlash from Democrats, civil rights groups, and Republicans like Sen. Tim Scott. Defenders called it a harmless Lion King parody targeting multiple Democrats including Biden, dismissed outrage as performative or media distraction from election fraud claims, and noted it was posted by a staffer with Trump refusing to apologize.

Makala yanayohusiana

President Trump at podium denying release of drug boat strike video, with footage screen and divided lawmakers in background.
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Trump backs away from earlier openness to releasing full video of second drug boat strike

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President Donald Trump said on Monday that he never agreed to release video of a second U.S. military strike on a suspected drug boat in the Caribbean, walking back comments he made last week as bipartisan scrutiny of the operation intensifies. Selected lawmakers have viewed the full footage behind closed doors and are divided over whether it should be made public.

On February 6, 2026, President Donald Trump shared a video on Truth Social showing former President Barack Obama and Michelle Obama with their faces on ape bodies, drawing widespread criticism for invoking a dehumanizing racist trope. The White House initially defended the post before deleting it after 12 hours, blaming a staffer. Senator Tim Scott, a Black Republican, called it the most racist content from the administration.

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In a recent NPR interview, ABC News correspondent Jonathan Karl described President Trump's actions this week as increasingly unrestrained, including rewriting presidential histories and attempting to rename the Kennedy Center. Karl, author of 'Retribution,' attributes this to Trump's sense of empowerment from party control and a Supreme Court decision. The behavior, while familiar, shows a lack of internal checks.

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