
Crass, flashy, outrageous: Trump media blitz redefines meaning of presidential
There was a disturbance in the Force. Donald Trump celebrated 'Star Wars Day' this week with an AI-generated image of himself as a muscle-bound warrior holding a red lightsaber in front of two US flags and eagles.
It seemed like a bit of fun but appeared on the White House's official X account with a dark political message: 'Happy May the 4th to all, including the Radical Left Lunatics who are fighting so hard to bring Sith Lords, Murderers, Drug Lords, Dangerous Prisoners, & well known MS-13 Gang Members, back into our Galaxy. You're not the Rebellion – you're the Empire. May the 4th be with you.'
Star Wars nerds were quick to point out that a red lightsaber implies that Trump has embraced the Dark Side. Actor Mark Hamill, who played Luke Skywalker, wrote on social media: 'Proof this guy is full of SITH.' But the joking-not-joking post was also indicative of a wider trend: a revolution in the way the White House communicates with the American public.
Over the past three and a half months the US president and his team have launched a relentless media offensive based on crass language, flashy tactics, shock-value videos and social media memes and posts that are outrageous by design. They have used platforms and personalities to bypass traditional outlets and directly engage the Maga (Make America great again) base. They have found new ways to drown out critics, goad opponents and antagonise the world.
The embrace of viral far-right culture has nurtured a parallel information ecosystem through pro-Trump outlets enjoying a significant growth in influence, access to power and financial investment. It is helping the president dominate the 'attention economy' and reshape narratives around the economy, immigration and other policy issues. But it also alarms critics who warn that insults and lies are going unchecked.
Tara Setmayer, a political commentator and former Republican communications director on Capitol Hill, said: 'Donald Trump has always understood mass communication and the power of propaganda and his rise and success politically will go down in history as one of the most successful propaganda operations ever. He has completely upended any semblance of decency, of class, of gravitas when it comes to presidential communications.
'It's literally turning presidential methods of communication into the WWE – the imagery, the immaturity, the outrageousness. All of those things seem to be more important than truth or respect for the office and what it means to use the power of the bully pulpit to speak to the American people and the world.'
Presidential communications have come a long way. Woodrow Wilson held the first presidential press conference in 1913. Franklin Roosevelt pioneered radio with his informal 'fireside chats' during the Great Depression and the second world war, articulating policies such as the New Deal directly to citizens.
John F Kennedy leveraged TV for live addresses, for example during the Cuban missile crisis. Ronald Reagan, a former actor, relished televised addresses, earning the nickname 'the great communicator'. Barack Obama was the first president to use platforms such as YouTube and Twitter extensively, hosting online town halls and bypassing old media.
Over the past decade Trump has combined the old with the new, holding traditional in-person rallies while also being prolific on Twitter during his first term – a single all caps tweet could dominate headlines, move financial markets or upend global diplomacy – and now his own Truth Social platform.
But only since returning to office has he turned the White House into a quasi-content provider in its own right, continuing the aggressive media strategy they honed during his winning election campaign to achieve what his communications director, Steven Cheung, has called 'full spectrum dominance'.
In January Karoline Leavitt, the White House press secretary, posted a photo of men in chains boarding a plane and wrote: 'Deportation flights have begun.' In February the White House posted on X a Valentine's Day card with the faces of Trump and 'border czar' Tom Homan with the caption: 'Roses are red, violets are blue, come here illegally and we'll deport you.'
It also posted a video of shackled migrants being loaded on to planes, with the sounds of clanking chains and whirring jet engines in the background. The caption said 'ASMR: Illegal Alien Deportation Flight.' In March, on the day of Trump's address to a joint session of Congress, the White House's rapid-response account posted more than 200 times to X, promoting clips and favourable reactions.
Trump has spent his career living by the rule that, when he takes a hit, he hits back harder. That philosophy now infuses the White House. When the actor Selena Gomez posted an Instagram video in which she cried about the deportation of children, it quickly produced video interviews with the mothers of children killed by undocumented immigrants.
When Kilmar Ábrego García, a Maryland man with protected legal status, was mistakenly deported to a notorious prison in El Salvador, Leavitt said 'outrage' about the case by Democrats and the media 'has been nothing short of despicable'. Dozens of posters of arrested undocumented immigrants were placed along the White House driveway, ensuring they would appear in the live shots of TV journalists.
Some content is downright bizarre. The White House shared a photo of a fake Time magazine cover with Trump in a golden crown and the caption, 'LONG LIVE THE KING.' Another post contained an AI-generated video that showed the Gaza Strip transformed into a luxurious, gilded resort called 'Trump Gaza'. And earlier this month Trump shared an AI-generated image of himself dressed as pope as the mourning of Pope Francis continued.
Setmayer, who now runs the Seneca Project political action committee, commented: 'It's so outrageous that it would be comical if it weren't so serious. There's nothing funny or comical about insulting one of the world's largest religions and putting yourself in that role. It's blasphemous. But it's also a window into how Donald Trump views himself: this is part of that malignant narcissism.
'He is so desperate for adulation and attention and being all powerful that he would project himself in a cartoon-like rendering of positions of power using the white House platform to push it. This is something a maladjusted 12-year-old does. Not the most powerful man in the world.'
The Trump White House has a symbiotic relationship with a new wave of podcasters, X users and YouTubers who enjoy access to the briefing room and presidential press pool, often asking Trump conspicuously sycophantic questions. Employees of outlets such as the National Pulse and the Daily Wire have been invited on foreign trips with cabinet officials. The exposure is leading to bigger advertising deals and distribution contracts.
No one embodies the new era of White House communications better than Leavitt, who at 27 is the youngest ever press secretary and probably the most zealously on-message. She has shown an uncanny ability to channel Trump's political psyche, his relish for disparaging the so-called legacy media and his willingness to play fast and loose with facts.
Henry Olsen, a senior fellow at the Ethics and Public Policy Center thinktank in Washington, said: 'She's approaching it in a very different way than others have done. She is forthrightly being a person who communicates the message of the White House rather than responds to the questions of the press. You can query whether that's the job she ought to be doing but she is doing it in an outstanding way.
'She is mature beyond her years. She's articulate. She both can deliver the message and respond in an interactive way, which is something that some press secretaries have difficulty with. If the job of the press secretary is to send the message of the administration on a regular basis in person she is knocking the ball out of the park.'
But Mike McCurry, who was White House press secretary under President Bill Clinton, is among those who query if that is what the job is about. He said: 'She seems to be in nonstop belligerent mode and showing disdain for the reporters in the room. It's nothing but a propaganda show. She's not doing the job as it's traditionally been defined. She's got a whole different role in the Trump cosmos.'
Leavitt presents a weekly 'Maga Minute' roundup video on TikTok, YouTube and other platforms. Last week also saw the launch of White House Wire, a news-style website that publishes exclusively positive coverage. Its format closely resembles the Drudge Report, the rightwing site founded in the 1990s that broke the Monica Lewinsky scandal.
When he was working for Clinton, McCurry initially tried to dismiss questions about Lewinsky by retorting: 'Are you really going to ask a question based on something in the Drudge Report?' He acknowledges that today's White House is operating in a very different media environment – but argues that is no excuse for its lack of accountability.
McCurry said: 'The concept is if you keep throwing stuff up against the wall all the time, the press tries to chase everything down and they get befuddled a little bit because they don't have a way of focusing back on things that might truly matter in the world
'It's a strategy to try to overwhelm all of the legitimate sources of discourse and just keep changing the tune every day to match whatever it is that you want to try to get done. It's either completely malevolent or completely brilliant. It's hard to know which.'

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Daily Mirror
11 minutes ago
- Daily Mirror
9 insane moments as Donald Trump's beef with Elon Musk implodes spectacularly
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Especially after Musk - whose bottomless wallet helped swing the election for him - decided to pump millions of dollars into the race. In the end, Schmiel suffered a thumping defeat to liberal judge Susan Crawford. The state voted for Crawford by 55% to 45% - the first indication that Trump's magic - and Elon's cash - were not infallible. The electoral shine was starting to rub off. In the days that followed there was chatter that Trump wasn't all that happy about sharing the limelight with Musk if he wasn't going to see results. It was quietly agreed Musk would step back a bit and spend more time with his failing car business. Fast forward to last Friday, and the 130 days Musk was allowed to be a "special government employee" without having to make transparency declarations were up. There was a deeply weird press conference cum exit interview in the oval, where Musk, sporting a mean looking shiner, got extremely upset about a newspaper that accused him of being high on Ketamine during the campaign. And then he was gone, Donald probably thought. Until a few days later, when Elon started tweeting - Or X-ing, or whatever it's called these days - about Trump's budget bill. The infamous "Big Beautiful Bill" - or as Musk described it - a "disgusting abomination". The details aren't important, but the gist of his beef with the bill are that he was brought in to cut government spending, and in order to get them to vote the bill through, Trump had to let congress attach quite a lot of government spending to it. On Thursday, he escalated matters even further by going right after Trump's beloved trade war. "The Trump tariffs will cause a recession in the second half of this year," Musk wrote. Speaking in the Oval Office last night, Trump said he was "disappointed" in Musk's response to the Big Beautiful Bill. Of course, he went further on Truth Social later, saying: "Elon was 'wearing thin,' I asked him to leave, I took away his EV Mandate that forced everyone to buy Electric Cars that nobody else wanted (that he knew for months I was going to do!), and he just went CRAZY!" Regular readers will recall Trump was kind of fine with hawking electric cars a month or do ago, when he turned the South Lawn into a Tesla dealership. In one of the most unexpected escalations since Will Smith got out of his seat at the Oscars, Elon decided now was time to play the Epstein card. In remarks that we should note are entirely unsubstantiated, he tweeted: "Time to drop the really big bomb: "@realDonaldTrump is in the Epstein files. That is the real reason they have not been made public. "Have a nice day, DJT!" It's not a secret that Donald Trump and Jeffrey Epstein used to hang out at New York Society events. There are pictures and video. Any suggestion of anything other than this is entirely unsubstantiated. Trump followed that up with an entirely unveiled threat - and a brutal assessment of Musk's work with Doge... "The easiest way to save money in our Budget, Billions and Billions of Dollars, is to terminate Elon's Governmental Subsidies and Contracts. I was always surprised that Biden didn't do it!" Musk then reminded the President that a huge chunk of America's space travel capabilities are tied up in his companies. He tweeted: "In light of the President's statement about cancellation of my government contracts, @SpaceX will begin decommissioning its Dragon spacecraft immediately." NASA relies on the Dragon spacecraft to ferry astronauts to and from the International Space Station. In fact, there's a launch scheduled for next Tuesday. "I don't mind Elon turning against me," Trump said. 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He urged Trump to immediately seize SpaceX from Musk. And he said: "They should initiate a formal investigation of his immigration status because I am of the strong belief that he is an illegal alien, and he should be deported from the country immediately. "Elon Musk is illegal, and he's got to go." On the other hand, Ian Miles Cheong, who is somehow a major figure in the MAGA movement despite being some kid who lives in Malaysia, is going hard Team Musk. "President vs Elon. Who wins? My money's on Elon," he tweeted last night. "Trump should be impeached and JD Vance should replace him." As tension between the White House and Europe heats up, the Mirror has launched its very own US Politics WhatsApp community where you'll get all the latest news from across the pond. We'll send you the latest breaking updates and exclusives all directly to your phone. Users must download or already have WhatsApp on their phones to join in. All you have to do to join is , select 'Join Chat' and you're in! We may also send you stories from other titles across the Reach group. We will also treat our community members to special offers, promotions, and adverts from us and our partners. If you don't like our community, you can check out any time you like. To leave our community click on the name at the top of your screen and choose Exit group. If you're curious, you can read our . Tennessee. He was visiting Nashville last night as a featured guest of a Republican National Committee fundraiser. As the public fallout picked up steam, he tweeted this picture of him with comedian podcaster Theo Von: He, of course, remains Team Trump - and posted: "President Trump has done more than any person in my lifetime to earn the trust of the movement he leads. I'm proud to stand beside him." Well, when Elon wakes up, he'll probably do some more tweeting. That's literally the only thing we can solidly predict with this guy. 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And listen to our exciting new political podcast The Division Bell, hosted by the Mirror and the Express every Thursday.


Daily Mail
11 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
Joe Biden's only hand-signed pardon during his final months in office
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'Autopens to me are used when thousands of letters come in from young people all over the country and you want to get them back,' Trump said on Thursday. 'Biden's cognitive issues and apparent mental decline during his presidency were even 'worse' in private, and those closest to him 'tried to hide it' from the public,' Trump said in his statement. 'To do so, Biden's advisors during his years in office severely restricted his news conferences and media appearances, and they scripted his conversations with lawmakers, government officials, and donors, all to cover up his inability to discharge his duties.' Past presidents, including George W. Bush and Barack Obama, have employed the autopen in limited circumstances, such as signing routine letters or lower-level appointments. However, critics argue that Biden's reliance on the device was unprecedented. 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'They are working to push disastrous legislation that would cut essential programs like Medicaid and raise costs on American families.' In private, Biden's aides insist that autopen use was limited to routine matters, and that Biden personally reviewed major decisions. However, newly surfaced internal memos suggest that a handful of senior advisors controlled access to the president and directed autopen usage without always consulting him, raising further doubts about the authenticity of some presidential actions. The implications are enormous - if Trump's investigation finds that Biden's use of the autopen was improper, it could challenge the legitimacy of thousands of presidential decisions, from judicial appointments to sweeping regulatory changes. House Republicans are already signaling they may attempt to invalidate actions signed via autopen, raising constitutional questions that could land before the Supreme Court. 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The Independent
12 minutes ago
- The Independent
News of Trump-Musk ceasefire saves Tesla shares from another nosedive after $99bn loss
Tesla shares are expected to rise by 5.7 per cent following a $99 billion hit due to a feud between Elon Musk and Donald Trump. The electric vehicle manufacturer's share price dropped over 14 per cent after an argument between Musk and Trump, impacting Tesla's market capitalisation. A ceasefire between Musk and Trump is expected, with a meeting planned, leading to renewed investor interest in Tesla stock. The sell-off caused Tesla to lose its status as a $1 trillion company, and Musk′s networth decreased by approximately $34bn. Potential changes to tax incentives for EV purchases and threats to cancel government contracts with SpaceX could further negatively impact Tesla and Musk's other business interests.