
Trump rants that Washington Commanders should change name back to ‘Redskins'
After rebranding the Gulf of Mexico to the Gulf of America earlier this year, Trump is now calling for the Washington Commanders and the Cleveland Guardians to revert their names to the Washington Redskins and Cleveland Indians, respectively.
The Redskins left that name behind in 2020 after years of pressure from groups complaining that the team was using a racial slur for Native Americans as its name. The team initially went by the "Washington Football Team" until it settled on the Commanders as its new name.
The Indians became the Guardians in 2021 after similar pressure to change the name and the team's Chief Wahoo logo. The Cleveland Major League Baseball team had been called the Indians since 1915.
On Sunday, Trump went on a Truth Social rant demanding that the teams revert to their original names, claiming that "our great Indian people" want the name changes.
It came as the president is under pressure for his links to Jeffrey Epstein and his administration's failure to release all the files associated with his case.
'The Washington 'Whatever's' should IMMEDIATELY change their name back to the Washington Redskins Football Team,' Trump wrote. 'There is a big clamoring for this. Likewise, the Cleveland Indians, one of the six original baseball teams, with a storied past. Our great Indian people, in massive numbers, want this to happen. Their heritage and prestige is systematically being taken away from them. Times are different now than they were three or four years ago. We are a Country of passion and common sense. OWNERS, GET IT DONE!!!'
In 2020, a University of Michigan/University of California, Berkeley poll given to Native American respondents found that half were offended by the name "Redskins," and 65 percent said they were offended by the "tomahawk chop" done at sporting events. Even more — 73 percent — said fans doing imitations of Native American dances was offensive.
Despite Trump's social media tantrum, it does not appear as though the Commanders will be changing their name anytime soon. The team's owner, Josh Harris, told Fox News back in April that there were no plans to restore the team's original name.
"The Commanders' name actually has taken on an amazing kind of element in our building," Harris told Fox News' Bret Baier, who asked if the team would revert to its original name as part of its new stadium deal in Washington, D.C. "So, the people that certain types of players that are tough, that love football, are delegated Commanders and Jayden [Daniels], for example, is a Commander, and they're ranked."
Harris said that since Washington D.C. is a "military city" the team would be "moving forward with the Commanders name, excited about that, and not looking back."
There is also no indication that the Guardians are planning a return to the days of "the Tribe."
The team has long maintained that it took on the name "Indians" to honor Louis Sockalexis, believed to be the first Native American player in major league baseball. Sockalexis played with the Cleveland Spiders in the late 1800s. He died in 1913, and two years later, the then-Cleveland Naps changed their name to the Cleveland Indians, though there is no definitive way to know what the team's intentions were at the time.
The Guardians' new name references the art deco 'Guardians of Traffic' statues that tower over the Hope Memorial Bridge, which is just outside the team's stadium in downtown Cleveland.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Independent
a minute ago
- The Independent
Republican woman who didn't ‘know if females should be in office' is running for office
A 25-year-old Republican woman, who 'didn't know if females should be in office,' is now running for a seat in the Arizona Senate. Mylie Biggs, the daughter of Rep. Andy Biggs, one of President Trump's biggest supporters, announced her state senate bid i n Arizona's 14th legislative district alongside Rep. Laurin Hendrix and Rep. Khyl Powell. Her father, who has entered the race for Arizona governor in 2026, has represented the district for 14 years before he was elected to Congress in 2017. However, the young Republican who has only just cleared the Arizona age requirement for legislative office has already come under fire for a resurfaced audio clip that contradicts her bid. Last August, Biggs appeared on an Arizona-based podcast called The Matty McCurdy Program, the Phoenix New Times reports. In the segment, Biggs is heard spouting the belief that women should not enter office. 'Honestly, I don't know if I would vote for any female. I don't know if females should be in office,' Biggs told McCurdy and another on the August 6, 2024, episode, laughing off the controversial take. Then, Biggs drilled down on her opinion to ensure that she wasn't kidding. 'There are a lot of really good women in office, I'm not trying to hate on anyone – like, some really good congresswomen,' Biggs said. 'Yeah, I don't think women should hold office in general. That's my position. That's my stance. I think women should run the home.' Biggs, who graduated from the University of Arizona last year with a degree in political science, has strongly aligned herself with conservative values on women's rights. In the podcast, she expressed her concerns with how 'modern feminism' has changed society, 'starting with women's right to vote.' 'I hate a 9-to-5 schedule,' Biggs said before saying that a domesticated life was something that appealed to her. 'I get home, and I don't want to do anything else. Like, women aren't built for this. I just want to be a wife. I just want to be a mom.' In December 2024, the young conservative returned to McCurdy's show to discuss the 2024 election results. While looking at electoral maps, she again bemoaned the impact of women voting in elections. 'Have you seen ones where it's like, if women were the only ones to vote, what it would look like, and it's literally like 80% blue,' she said comically. 'It's like, 'Whoa. Repeal the 19th Amendment,' she added. When she announced her candidacy run on social media, Biggs praised her upbringing, where her parents 'taught me to love my country, the Constitution, and to value my freedoms.' Since her June announcement, Biggs has still not filed a campaign finance report, even though the report for the second quarter of 2025 was due on July 21, the Phoenix New Times reports. She has reportedly not raised any money yet. Rep. Powell told the Phoenix New Times that "I know Mylie and have complete trust in her." Her father most recently voted against demands for the Department of Justice to release the Epstein files, despite previously pressing for their publication.


Daily Mail
16 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
Frantic terrorist MANHUNT 'begins across America' as terrifying Iranian passport plot to flood the nation with jihadis is uncovered
After President Donald Trump ordered airstrikes to take out three of Iran 's nuclear facilities in late June, defense officials warned that Tehran may have the ability to strike back – from inside the US Homeland. Indeed, the Islamic Republic and its proxy forces in the Middle East, namely Hezbollah and Hamas, have long sought to plant terrorist sleeper agents, poised to activate when called upon, in American communities.


The Independent
27 minutes ago
- The Independent
Takeaways from AP's report on Alaska Natives' response to oil and mining proposals
President Donald Trump 's administration and its allies have pushed aggressively for drilling, mining and logging in Alaska. This has intensified long-standing debate over extraction projects in the nation's largest state, particularly within Alaska Native communities. Some view such projects as key to jobs and economic development. Others see them posing environmental risks as they've already faced severe fishing restrictions on the state's longest rivers due to a collapse in the salmon population. Scientists are unsure of the causes of the salmon collapse — which possibly include warming waters and commercial fishing — but opponents of extraction say its possible impacts could be similar in terms of endangering subsistence traditions and food sources. They say this risks, in turn, damaging their sacred connections to the land and to cultural traditions tied to fishing and hunting. How has the administration pushed for extraction projects? Trump signed an executive order on his first day in office in January seeking to 'maximize the development and production of the natural resources' in the state. Congress, in its recent budget bill, authorized an unprecedented four new sales of oil and gas leases in the coastal plain of the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge in northeast Alaska. It also authorized more sales in the National Petroleum Reserve-Alaska in the northern part of the state. Extraction proposals take years to become reality, if ever. Previous lease sales have generated limited interest, and the extent of oil reserves in the Arctic refuge remains uncertain. Members of Trump's Cabinet visited Alaska in June. They called for doubling the amount of oil coursing through its vast pipeline system and building a massive natural gas pipeline as its 'big, beautiful twin.' The administration is also boosting the proposed Ambler Mining District Industrial Access Project, which would include construction of a 200-mile road in wilderness areas and open the way for more mines. Private corporations are pursuing projects, some in collaboration with Alaska Native corporations — which sometimes are in conflict with their Indigenous shareholders — and landowners. One is an oil exploration project in the Yukon Flats. Another is a proposed major gold mine in southwestern Alaska, which would require a massive dam to contain millions of tons of chemical and mineral waste. Project proponents say the dam will be safely built, incorporating the surrounding geology and state-of-the-art design. Trump's policy shifts came even as he removed one of the most prominent Alaska Native names from the official map. He returned the federal name of 'Mount McKinley' to the largest mountain in Alaska and North America. For all their disputes over extraction, Native and Alaska political leaders were largely united in wanting to keep its traditional Athabascan name of Denali, which translates to 'the high one.' What are the views of Alaska Natives favoring such projects? They say the projects can be done safely and bring much-needed jobs and economic development. They say this enables Native communities to fund services while retaining their subsistence hunting, fishing and other cultural traditions. 'We find that balance,' said PJ Simon, first chief of the Allakaket Tribal Council. 'We don't want handouts by the federal government. We want to stand on our own two feet.' Regional and local Native-run corporations, with the mandate of pursuing economic development for the benefit of Native shareholders, are actively involved in extraction proposals. In some cases, they own land and mineral rights in areas eyed for drilling or mining. What about Alaska Natives opposing such projects? They fear large-scale drilling and mining will overwhelm their ancient subsistence traditions. They say any short-term profits will precede a long-term legacy of environmental impacts to rivers, tundra and hunting grounds. 'Our people have been stewards of this land for millennia, and we've taken that relationship seriously because we have to sustain our resources,' said Gloria Simeon of Bethel, a small regional hub in southwestern Alaska, and a member of the environmental advocacy group Mother Kuskokwim Tribal Coalition. Already, tribes are struggling with severe fishing restrictions on their longest rivers, the Yukon and Kuskokwim, because of a collapse in salmon populations, which they have relied on for generations. The salmon collapse has been blamed on such factors as commercial overfishing and climate change. But many fear that extractive industries will create similar and permanent damage to caribou, salmon and other traditional food sources. 'We're already dealing with salmon problems,' said Chief Brian Ridley of the Tanana Chiefs Conference, a Fairbanks-based coalition of Athabascan tribes across Interior Alaska that oppose proposed drilling projects and the Ambler road project. 'The concern is if we start going down this path anywhere along the Yukon or any of the rivers and there's a spill, would that completely eliminate all the salmon stocks?' He said it's not just theoretical. A mine disaster in Canada last year caused a massive release of cyanide-laced debris, which caused fears that contamination might spread. Such a mining accident in the Yukon watershed could 'really take all the gains that we've gotten of trying to get the fish stocks back and really put us back to zero,' Ridley said. Why are subsistence hunting and fishing so important? Alaska Native people have relied for generations on hunting and fishing to survive the brutal winters — and in modern times, as a healthier alternative to expensive groceries. Fish camps and caribou hunts are closely interwoven with cultural traditions, where elders transmit skills and stories to younger generations. 'Protecting the river and the land and the Earth is part of the partnership and the relationship that we have as caregivers,' said Simeon. Who are Alaska Natives? Alaska Natives consist of diverse cultural and language groups in the state, among them the Aleut, Athabascan, Iñupiat, Tlingit and Yup'ik. They widely share a history in the region dating back thousands of years. They also share cultural and spiritual traditions, including those closely associated with subsistence hunting, and a belief in a sacred connection to the land, water and wildlife. Specific practices vary, and many follow both traditional and Christian practices. More than 1 in 5 Alaskans identify as Alaska Native or American Indian alone or in combination with another racial group, the highest ratio of any state, according to 2020 U.S. Census figures. The 1971 Alaska Claims Settlement Act, which resolved long-standing land claims with the federal government, resulted in establishment of regional and local for-profit corporations run by Native leaders for the benefit of Native shareholders. In some cases, such corporations are involved in extraction projects that tribal coalitions from the same area oppose. ___ Associated Press religion coverage receives support through the AP's collaboration with The Conversation US, with funding from Lilly Endowment Inc. The AP is solely responsible for this content.