Trump Says Football Team Shouldn't Have Dropped Controversial Name
Talking to reporters in New Jersey on Sunday, the president was asked whether the team should change its name back to the Redskins. 'Well, you want me to make a controversial statement? I would,' he replied. 'I wouldn't have changed the name. It just doesn't have the same... it doesn't have the same ring to me.'
Advertisement
However Trump made clear he was fine with the politically correct new name if the team were successful.
He added, 'But, you know, winning can make everything sound good. So if they win, all of a sudden the Commanders sounds good, but I wouldn't have changed the name.'
Washington Commanders players run through a gauntlet to start day two of mini camp in Ashburn, VA on June 11, 2025. (Photo by John McDonnell/For The Washington Post via Getty Images) / The Washington Post / The Washington Post via Getty Im
The team was known as the Washington Redskins from 1937, but the divisive name was receiving criticism from Native American groups as far back as the 1960s.
However in 2020, in the wake of protests over the death of George Floyd, the team came under pressure to change their name logo, first going with Washington Football Team before settling on Commanders.
Advertisement
Major sponsors including Nike, FedEx and PepsiCo were urged by investors and shareholders to pull their sponsorship unless the team dumped the Redskins name.
Washington Commanders safety Will Harris warms up during day two of mini camp in Ashburn, VA on June 11, 2025. (Photo by John McDonnell/For The Washington Post via Getty Images) / The Washington Post / The Washington Post via Getty Im
At the time, Carla Fredericks, director of First Peoples Worldwide, said 'Indigenous peoples were sort of left out of the civil rights movement in the late 1960s in many respects, because our conditions were so dire on reservations and our ability to engage publicly was very limited because of that. With social media now, obviously everything is very different.'
In April, Trump weighed in on the Redskins name change, saying he had spoken to Indians who had a problem with the rebrand.
Advertisement
'The Indians don't know why these names are being taken off,' Trump said.
'I think it's degrading to the Indian population and it's a great population. Washington... the Redskins... perhaps that's a little different, but I can tell you that I spoke to people of Indian heritage that loved that name and they love that team.'
He added, 'I think it's a superior name to what they have now and it had heritage behind it, it had something special.'
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
23 minutes ago
- Yahoo
South Korea trade envoy: may be able to strike framework deal with US by Aug 1 deadline
SEOUL (Reuters) -South Korea's top trade envoy said on Monday it may be possible to strike an "in-principle" trade deal with the United States by an August 1 deadline, but time is short to work out a detailed package seeking exemption from punishing U.S. tariffs, media reports said. Minister for Trade Yeo Han-koo, who held high-level talks with U.S. officials last week, said South Korea may have to make some strategic decisions over its agriculture market as part of trade negotiations with the United States, the Yonhap News Agency said. "I believe it's possible to reach an agreement in principle in the U.S. tariff negotiations, and then take some time to negotiate further," the Newsis news agency quoted Yeo as telling local media reporters. "Twenty days are not enough to come up with a perfect treaty that contains every detail." There was "considerable progress" in the discussion with U.S. officials over cooperation in key industrial sectors as part of the trade talks, Yeo was cited as saying, but Washington needs to cut industry-specific tariffs on autos and steel, calling them "unfair" and severely undermining bilateral cooperation. South Korea is in a race to reach a compromise trade pact in the hope of avoiding a 25% tariff slapped on its exports announced by U.S. President Donald Trump that is set to kick in on August 1, after a late start to negotiations with a new president voted in last month. President Lee Jae-myung took office on June 4 following the ouster of his predecessor Yoon Suk Yeol over a failed martial law attempt. The six months of political turmoil forced Seoul to initially focus on technical discussions over Trump's demands.
Yahoo
35 minutes ago
- Yahoo
MAGA, Musk Torch Trump Over Bondi Defense And Epstein Files
MAGA is livid over a Saturday statement from President Donald Trump, which doubled down on his administration's handling of the Epstein files. That post, which was shared on Truth Social, defended Attorney General Pam Bondi and urged Trump's followers to 'not waste Time and Energy' on the convicted sex offender. 'President Trump rarely loses touch with what's happening among the base, but he's missing the pulse on this one,' wrote Robby Starbuck, a conservative activist, in a post on X. ″.@realDonaldTrump please understand the EPSTEIN AFFAIR is not going away,' Michael Flynn, Trump's former national security adviser, added in another X post. 'If the administration doesn't address the massive number of unanswered questions about Epstein … then moving forward on so many other monumental challenges our nation is facing becomes much harder.' Self-described Trump supporters similarly flooded his Truth Social replies with their critiques, as responses to his Saturday post outnumbered likes and reposts by the thousands. 'This statement breaks my heart, Mr. President. … Please reconsider, sir. I voted for everything you are doing! Accountability was not something negotiable,' wrote one Truth Social user identified as @Rosie0226. 'This is going to cost you so many supporters. I being one of them,' wrote another user identified as @trustds1. And former Trump ally Elon Musk took this opportunity to lay into the president, too, boosting another X user who described the lengthy Saturday diatribe as 'in the running for the worst post ever made.' 'Just release the files as promised,' Musk wrote. The MAGA revolt comes after Trump officials – including FBI Director Kash Patel and FBI Deputy Director Dan Bongino – peddled conspiracy theories about Epstein for years, just to turn around and dispute them in a recent report. Previously, Bongino had questioned whether Epstein died by suicide, while Bondi had said that an Epstein client list was 'sitting on my desk right now to review' while speaking in a Fox News interview in February. A July memo from the DOJ and the FBI concluding they found no evidence that Epstein was killed or that he kept a client list to blackmail people has rattled Trump's base given the inconsistency with past statements. Previously, his supporters alleged that Democrats were trying to cover up the truth about Epstein's death and his ties with powerful men, and now they're accusing the current administration of doing the same. 'The lack of actual results at the DOJ and lack of transparency that translates into incompetence will cost the GOP House and Senate seats,' conspiracy theorist and Trump supporter Laura Loomer wrote on X on Saturday. AOC Accuses 'Rapist' Trump Of Withholding Epstein Files Amid MAGA Rage MAGA Continues To Rage At Trump About Jeffrey Epstein Files MAGA Members Have Mega Tizzy After DOJ And FBI Claim Epstein Files Don't Exist


New York Post
42 minutes ago
- New York Post
Miranda Devine: Epstein drama is an unnecessary distraction for Trump admin – and plays into the hands of malign Dems
Uh oh. Democrat swamp rat Jamie Raskin has jumped on the Epstein conspiracy bandwagon, demanding AG Pam Bondi, FBI Director Kash Patel and his deputy Dan Bongino testify to Congress about the so-called Epstein files. After five days of escalating hysteria and chest-beating, including ultimatums to the president to 'fire Blondi,' MAGA 'influencers' have found themselves on the same side as Raskin, which, needless to say, is the wrong side. While the whole episode has been handled clumsily by the Trump officials, it is not so difficult to believe that FBI vaults have been scrubbed of meaningful Jeffrey Epstein conspiracy information or never had any, if the pervert financier was an intelligence asset, as some reporting suggests. The intelligence angle stems from 2019 reporting by British journalist Vicky Ward in the Daily Beast in which she claimed that Alex Acosta, the former Florida US attorney who negotiated the 2008 sweetheart plea deal with Epstein over sexually abusing dozens of underage girls, told the Trump transition team in 2017, when he was being vetted for labor secretary that he had been warned off the case because Epstein 'belonged to intelligence.' Ward's sources were anonymous and Acosta has never confirmed the reports, which serve to divert blame from him over the controversial plea deal in which Epstein (right) served just 13 months in Palm Beach County jail after pleading guilty to soliciting prostitution. The slap on the wrist always looked shady. So did the fact that Epstein's clients continued with him after he was officially a registered sex offender. 'Still talking about this?' Fresh allegations from victims suing Epstein and investigative reporting by the Miami Herald led to new federal indictments from the Southern District of New York during Trump's first term. In August 2019 while awaiting trial on charges of sex trafficking and conspiracy to traffic minors, Epstein was found dead in his jail cell in Manhattan, and a conspiracy was born. Was it suicide or murder? Questions linger even though the DOJ and FBI have consistently maintained he committed suicide. Most recently former Epstein conspiracy mongers Patel and Bongino concluded that there is no evidence he was murdered. A DOJ memo last week announced the case is closed, that there is no Epstein 'client list,' and there will be no more public disclosures. But that wasn't the end of it. On Tuesday, Bondi was asked by Post White House correspondent Steven Nelson whether Epstein had ever worked for 'an American or foreign intelligence agency' and why there was a minute missing from the jailhouse video of the door of Epstein's cell the night he died. Trump interrupted to berate reporters for 'still talking about this guy, this creep?' Bondi, meanwhile, tried to explain why she told Fox News that the Epstein client list was 'sitting on my desk right now to review,' meaning she hadn't yet reviewed the file. As for claims that Epstein was working for an intelligence agency: 'I have no knowledge of that. I can get back to you on that.' The ensuing online MAGA influencer frenzy forced a justifiably exasperated President Trump to issue a Truth Social post defending Bondi: 'What's going on with my 'boys' and, in some cases, 'gals?' They're all going after Attorney General Pam Bondi, who is doing a FANTASTIC JOB! We're on one Team, MAGA, and I don't like what's happening . . . 'LET PAM BONDI DO HER JOB — SHE'S GREAT!' The nearly 20-year old Epstein saga is a distraction, he said: 'Kash Patel, and the FBI, must be focused on investigating Voter Fraud, Political Corruption, ActBlue, The Rigged and Stolen Election of 2020, and arresting Thugs and Criminals, instead of spending month after month looking at . . . Epstein.' He has a point. Other scandals As of Sunday, Bondi still had not got back to Nelson on whether Epstein was an intelligence asset. CIA Director John Ratcliffe might have more of an idea. He was sitting quietly at the far end of the conference table that day taking copious notes in a small notepad throughout Trump and Bondi's answers. But even for the most transparent administration in history, there are some things that a world superpower cannot divulge for national security reasons, or to avoid damaging relationships with allies. I'd love to know the truth about Epstein but it's not worth tearing the administration apart and playing into the hands of malign Dems. If we're looking in the rearview mirror, there are more recent scandals which are arguably more important. Every week, Post columnist Miranda Devine sits down for exclusive and candid conversations with the most influential disruptors in Washington. Subscribe here! Russiagate and associated other anti-Trump sabotage by the FBI and DOJ is something that Sen. Chuck Grassley has hold of like a dog with a bone. His latest discovery, revealed exclusively here, is a trove of emails from whistleblowers showing how anti-Trump FBI agents and prosecutors concocted a fantasy insurrection plot meeting at the Willard Hotel in Washington, DC in January 2021 to try to entrap Trump and associates like Rudy Giuliani and Roger Stone over allegedly inciting the Capitol riot. But all they had was a Washington Post article full of innuendo. In emails dated March 1 and March 2, 2022, anti-Trump agent Timothy Thibault, who has since resigned, wrote about the ongoing efforts of his team to satisfy requests from zealous J6 prosecutor Thomas Windom to open a case file on the 'Willard Hotel.' Thibault said the Washington Field Office was 'hard at work attempting to predicate a Preliminary Investigation, which would allow us to conduct many of the investigative activities Thomas has identified in his plan.' Windom's baseless wish list of investigations he wanted the FBI to pursue included issuing subpoenas to the Willard Hotel for information on everyone who stayed there from Jan. 1-7, 2021, and subpoenas for internal camera footage from the hotel. There would also be subpoenas to 'J6 witnesses,' email facilities, banks and a review of seized electronic data. 'Yet again, we see that crooked Biden-era FBI agents and DOJ prosecutors started with a conclusion and tried to fit in the data points after the fact,' says Grassley. 'That's the opposite of how real investigative work should be done. For these obsessive anti-Trump agents and prosecutors, the sole objective was to pin anyone connected to President Trump on potential criminal charges, no matter how remote the connection. 'None of this information would have been realized without patriotic whistleblowers.' Start your day with all you need to know Morning Report delivers the latest news, videos, photos and more. Thanks for signing up! Enter your email address Please provide a valid email address. By clicking above you agree to the Terms of Use and Privacy Policy. Never miss a story. Check out more newsletters Plots and punishments In the end, Windom's theory of the Willard Hotel 'war room' fell apart — because it wasn't true. 'The Willard hotel war room was about the election,' says Giuliani. 'We had nothing to do with the riot. We had no time for it. I was too busy trying to collect information about all the phony ballots.' When the FBI couldn't find dirt from their trawl through the Willard's guest list, unscrupulous Democrats, including J6 committee chairman Bennie Thompson and Jerry Nadler, sued Giuliani, Donald Trump Jr. and others under the 1871 Ku Klux Klan act, alleging they conspired to incite the Jan. 6 Capitol riot. Even partisan Obama appointed DC judge Amit Mehta couldn't entertain the nonsense, dismissing the civil suit for lack of evidence. Soon after, Giuliani's home and office in New York were raided by the FBI, who spied on his cloud with a covert surveillance warrant over a bogus foreign lobbying investigation which they later abandoned without filing a single charge. The process is the punishment, and nobody other than Trump has been hammered with lawfare as badly as Giuliani. It shows how determined malign elements inside the DOJ and FBI were to find dirt to destroy Trump. That's why it's important to expose the corruption, because the wrongdoers are still at it. They will never stop unless they are stopped.