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Business and personal 45th and 47th President of the United States Incumbent Tenure
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Donald Trump, having previously served as the 45th president and currently as the 47th, has elicited highly polarized public perceptions about his performance as a head of state and largely controversial opinions about his temperament and personal conduct while in office.
Before entering politics, he was a businessman and television personality famous for his image as a real estate tycoon. Viewed as an authentic figure by many of his supporters, Trump was viewed as not a serious contender during the 2016 presidential campaign.
He has been named Time Person of the Year, Financial Times Person of the Year and Forbes second most powerful world leader in 2016, and Time Person of the Year again in 2024.
During his career as a businessman, Trump had an image of "the epitome of entrepreneurial success and glamour", which he advanced by hosting The Apprentice. [1]
Trump's first book, The Art of the Deal , published in 1987, was a New York Times Best Seller. According to The New Yorker , "The book expanded Trump's renown far beyond New York City, making him an emblem of the successful tycoon." The book features an image Trump has promoted as a self-made man. [2] This image of Trump as a billionaire self-made man supported his populist appeal in the 2016 election and during his first presidency. [2] [3]
Oversized red ties, tanned face, hairstyle, thumbs up and pouted lips are consistent elements of Trump's appearance that are very recognizable and make up an "iconic" imagery. [5]
In 2004, the Chicago Tribune wrote that Trump is "known for his gaudy casinos and unusual mane of copper hair." [6] His hair has been subject to speculation and ridicule; [7] during his 2016 presidential campaign, it was the subject of much public discussion, wherein it was asserted to be a toupée or comb over. [8] In a 2011 interview, Trump said, "I get a lot of credit for comb-overs. But it's not really a comb-over. It's sort of a little bit forward and back. I've combed it the same way for years. Same thing, every time." [9]
As of 2017, Trump's "unique personal style, brashness and disregard for conventional political norms and discourse" gained him attention and detractors, according to Gallup. Among detractors, perceptions of his temperament, arrogance and a tendency to act contrary to the expectations of presidents were disapproved of. [10] As of 2023, critics perceived Trump to be vulgar and self-obsessed. [11] After his temperament and mental fitness were subject to public debate, Trump responded by saying that he is a "very stable genius". [12] Americans have mostly disapproved of Trump's temperament and personal conduct in office. [13] To his supporters, Trump is seen as relatable and a simple and straightforward figure, who trusts his instincts. [5]
According to a review of Trump's public appearances by The New York Times , Trump's speeches became longer, less focused, harsher and more profane over the years. On one occasion, he recounted how the audience at his debate with Kamala Harris was on his side, even though there was no audience as the debate was held in an empty hall. According to the article, "He digresses into bizarre tangents about golf, about sharks, about his own 'beautiful' body. He relishes 'a great day in Louisiana' after spending the day in Georgia. He expresses fear that North Korea is 'trying to kill me' when he presumably means Iran." [14]
Trump has played himself in the role of a rich and powerful businessman in cameo appearances in films and television shows [15] [16] and from 2004 to 2015 as the host of the reality show The Apprentice.
Trump has been the subject of parody, comedy, and caricature. He has been parodied regularly on Saturday Night Live by Phil Hartman, Darrell Hammond, and Alec Baldwin, and in South Park as Mr. Garrison. The Simpsons episode "Bart to the Future" –written during his 2000 campaign for the Reform Party –anticipated a Trump presidency. A parody series called The President Show debuted in April 2017 on Comedy Central, while another one called Our Cartoon President debuted on Showtime in February 2018. [17]
Trump's wealth and lifestyle had been a fixture of hip hop lyrics since the 1980s; he was named in hundreds of songs, most often in a positive tone. [18] [19] Mentions of Trump in hip hop turned negative and pejorative after he ran for office in 2015, including the release of a song called "FDT" (for "Fuck Donald Trump") [18] [20] which later topped the iTunes charts after Joe Biden defeated Trump in the 2020 United States presidential election. [21]
Throughout his career, Trump has sought media attention, with a "love-hate" relationship with the press. [22] [23] [24] Trump began promoting himself in the press in the 1970s. [25] Fox News anchor Bret Baier and former House speaker Paul Ryan have characterized Trump as a "troll" who makes controversial statements to see people's "heads explode". [26] [27] According to conservative media watchdog, Media Research Center, 92% of media coverage of the Trump administration portrays him negatively, which has made Trump accuse the mainstream media of bias. [28]
In the 2016 campaign, Trump benefited from a record amount of free media coverage, elevating his standing in the Republican primaries. [29] New York Times writer Amy Chozick wrote in 2018 that Trump's media dominance, which enthralls the public and creates "can't miss" reality television-type coverage, was politically beneficial for him. [30] According to Columbia Journalism Review, "Because Trump entered the presidential stage from the world of business hucksterism and reality TV, he was seen, from the outset, as a less serious contender. In fact, he was treated as a joke." [31] Salena Zito wrote for The Atlantic that "the press takes [Trump] literally, but not seriously; his supporters take him seriously, but not literally." [31]
Throughout his 2016 presidential campaign and his presidency, Trump has accused the press of bias, calling it the "fake news media" and "the enemy of the people". [32] [33] After winning the election, journalist Lesley Stahl recounted Trump's allegedly saying he intentionally demeaned and discredited the media "so when you write negative stories about me no one will believe you." [34]
Trump has privately and publicly mused about revoking the press credentials of journalists he views as critical. [35] His administration moved to revoke the press passes of two White House reporters, which were restored by the courts. [36] In 2019, a member of the foreign press reported many of the same concerns as those of media in the U.S., expressing concern that a normalization process by reporters and media results in an inaccurate characterization of Trump. [37] The Trump White House held about a hundred formal press briefings in 2017, declining by half during 2018 and to two in 2019. [36]
Trump has employed the legal system as an intimidation tactic against the press. [38] In early 2020, the Trump campaign sued The New York Times, The Washington Post, and CNN for alleged defamation. [39] [40] These lawsuits lacked merit and were not likely to succeed, however. [38] [41]
At the end of Trump's second year, his two-year average Gallup approval rating was the lowest of any president since World War II. [42] In January 2020, his Gallup rating reached 49%, [43] the highest point since he took office, with 63% of those polled approving his handling of the economy. [44] His approval and disapproval ratings have been unusually stable. [45] [46] [47] In 2019 Gallup found Trump to be the most polarizing president to date. [48]
In Gallup's end-of-year poll asking Americans to name the man they admire the most, Trump placed second to Obama in 2017 and 2018, tied with Obama in 2019, and placed first in 2020. [49] [50] Since Gallup started conducting the poll in 1948, [51] Trump is the first elected president not to be named most admired in his first year in office. [51]
Globally, a Gallup poll on 134 countries comparing the approval ratings of U.S. leadership between the years 2016 and 2017 found that only in 29 of them did Trump lead Obama in job approval. [52] Overall ratings were similar to those in the last two years of the George W. Bush presidency. [53]
Trump was viewed as not a serious candidate during the 2016 presidential campaign. [31] He was viewed positively by some voters as an outsider who was opposed to politicians, appealing in the context of the Tea Party movement. [54]
Trump's presence on social media has attracted attention worldwide since he joined Twitter in March 2009. He frequently tweeted during the 2016 election campaign and has continued to do so as president. As of March 2024, Trump has more than 87 million Twitter followers. [55]
By the end of May 2020, Trump had written about 52,000 tweets. [56] These include 22,115 tweets over seven years before his presidential candidacy, 8,159 tweets during the 1+1⁄2 years of his candidacy and transition period, and 14,186 tweets over the first three years of his presidency. Of all those tweets, Trump was found to have lied 30,000 plus times. [57]
Trump has frequently used Twitter as a direct means of communication with the public. A White House press secretary said early in his presidency that Trump's tweets are official statements by the president of the United States, [58] employed for announcing policy or personnel changes. Trump used Twitter to fire Secretary of State Rex Tillerson in March 2018 [59] and Secretary of Defense Mark Esper in November 2020. [60]
Many of Trump's tweets contain false assertions. [61] [62] [63] In May 2020, Twitter began tagging some Trump tweets with fact-checking warnings [56] [64] [65] and labels for violations of Twitter rules. [66] Trump responded by threatening to "strongly regulate" or "close down" social media platforms. [56] [67]
As president, Trump frequently made false statements in public speeches and remarks. [61] [62] [71] The misinformation has been documented by fact-checkers; academics and the media have widely described the phenomenon as unprecedented in American politics. [72] [73] [74] This behavior was similarly observed when he was a presidential candidate. [75] [76] His falsehoods have also become a distinctive part of his political identity. [73]
Trump uttered "at least one false or misleading claim per day on 91 of his first 99 days" in office, according to The New York Times, [61] and 1,318 total in his first 263 days in office, according to the "Fact Checker" political analysis column of The Washington Post. [77] By the Post's tally, it took Trump 601 days to reach 5,000 false or misleading statements and another 226 days to reach the 10,000 mark. [78] For the seven weeks leading up to the midterm elections, it rose to an average of thirty per day [79] from 4.9 during his first hundred days in office. [80] The Post's reported tally is 22,247 as of August 27, 2020, [68] with the 2019 total more than double the cumulative total of 2017 and 2018. [81]
Some of Trump's falsehoods are inconsequential, such as his claims of a large crowd size during his inauguration. [82] [83] Others have had more far-reaching effects, such as Trump's promotion of unproven antimalarial drugs as a treatment for COVID-19 in a press conference and on Twitter in March 2020. [84] [85] The claims had consequences worldwide, such as a shortage of these drugs in the United States and panic-buying in Africa and South Asia. [86] [87] The state of Florida obtained nearly a million doses for its hospitals, even though most of them did not want the drug. [88] Other misinformation, such as Trump's retweet of unverified videos of a far-right British nationalist group in November 2017, serves Trump's domestic political purposes. [89] As a matter of principle, Trump does not apologize for his falsehoods. [90]
Despite the frequency of Trump's falsehoods, the media rarely referred to them as "lies", [91] [92] a word that has in the past been avoided out of respect for the presidential office. [91] [92] Nevertheless, in August 2018 The Washington Post declared for the first time that some of Trump's misstatements (statements concerning hush money paid to Stormy Daniels and Playboy model Karen McDougal) were lies. [93] [92]
In 2020, Trump was a significant source of disinformation on national voting practices and the COVID-19 pandemic. [94] Trump's attacks on mail-in ballots and other election practices served to weaken public faith in the integrity of the 2020 presidential election, [95] [96] while his disinformation about the pandemic dangerously delayed and weakened the national response to it. [94] [97] [98]
Some view the nature and frequency of Trump's falsehoods as having profound and corrosive consequences on democracy. [99] James Pfiffner, professor of policy and government at George Mason University, wrote in 2019 that Trump lies differently from previous presidents, because he offers "egregious false statements that are demonstrably contrary to well-known facts"; these lies are the "most important" of all Trump lies. By calling facts into question, people will be unable to properly evaluate their government, with beliefs or policy irrationally settled by "political power"; this erodes liberal democracy, wrote Pfiffner. [100]
Before and throughout his presidency, Trump has promoted numerous conspiracy theories, including "birtherism", the Clinton body count theory, QAnon and alleged Ukrainian interference in U.S. elections. [101] In October 2020, Trump retweeted a QAnon follower who asserted that Osama bin Laden was still alive, a body double had been killed in his place and "Biden and Obama may have had Seal Team 6 killed." [102]
Many of Trump's comments and actions have been seen as racist or racially charged. [103] He has repeatedly denied he is racist, asserting: "I am the least racist person there is anywhere in the world." [104] Many of his supporters say the way he speaks reflects his rejection of political correctness, while others accept it because they share such beliefs. [105] [106] Scholars have discussed Trump's rhetoric in the context of white supremacy. [107]
Several studies and surveys have found that racist attitudes fueled Trump's political ascendance and have been more important than economic factors in determining the allegiance of Trump voters. [106] [108] Racist and Islamophobic attitudes have been shown to be a powerful indicator of support for Trump. [109] In national polling, about half of Americans say that Trump is racist; a greater proportion believe that he has emboldened racists. [110] [111] [112]
In 1975, he settled a 1973 Department of Justice lawsuit that alleged housing discrimination against black renters. [113] He has also been accused of racism for insisting a group of black and Latino teenagers were guilty of raping a white woman in the 1989 Central Park jogger case, even after they were exonerated by DNA evidence in 2002. He has maintained his position on the matter into 2019. [114]
Trump relaunched his political career in 2011 as a leading proponent of "birther" conspiracy theories alleging that Barack Obama, the first black U.S. president, was not born in the United States. [115] [116] In April 2011, Trump claimed credit for pressuring the White House to publish the "long-form" birth certificate, which he considered fraudulent, and later saying this made him "very popular". [117] [118] In September 2016, amid pressure, he acknowledged that Obama was born in the U.S. and falsely claimed the rumors had been started by Hillary Clinton during her 2008 presidential campaign. [119] In 2017, he reportedly still expressed birther views in private. [120]
According to an analysis in Political Science Quarterly , Trump made "explicitly racist appeals to whites" during his 2016 presidential campaign. [121] In particular, his campaign launch speech drew widespread criticism for claiming Mexican immigrants were "bringing drugs, they're bringing crime, they're rapists." [122] [123] His later comments about a Mexican-American judge presiding over a civil suit regarding Trump University were also criticized as racist. [124]
Trump's comments in reaction to the 2017 Charlottesville far-right rally were interpreted by some as implying a moral equivalence between white supremacist demonstrators and counter-protesters. [125]
In a January 2018 Oval Office meeting to discuss immigration legislation, he reportedly referred to El Salvador, Haiti, Honduras, and African nations as "shithole countries". [126] His remarks were condemned as racist worldwide, as well as by many members of Congress. [127] [128]
In July 2019, Trump tweeted that four Democratic members of Congress –all four minority women, three of them native-born Americans –should "go back" to the countries they "came from". [129] Two days later the House of Representatives voted 240–187, mostly along party lines, to condemn his "racist comments". [130] White nationalist publications and social media sites praised his remarks, which continued over the following days. [131] Trump continued to make similar remarks during his 2020 campaign. [132]
Trump has a history of insulting and belittling women when speaking to media and in tweet. He made lewd comments, demeaned women's looks, and called them names like 'dog', 'crazed, crying lowlife', 'face of a pig', or 'horseface'. [133] [134] [135]
In October 2016, two days before the second presidential debate, a 2005 "hot mic" recording surfaced in which Trump was heard bragging about kissing and groping women without their consent, saying "when you're a star, they let you do it, you can do anything ... grab 'em by the pussy." [136] The incident's widespread media exposure led to Trump's first public apology during the campaign [137] and caused outrage across the political spectrum. [138]
At least twenty-six women have publicly accused Trump of sexual misconduct as of September 2020 [update] , including his then-wife Ivana. There were allegations of rape, violence, being kissed and groped without consent, looking under women's skirts, and walking in on naked women. [139] [140] [141] In 2016, he denied all accusations, calling them "false smears", and alleged there was a conspiracy against him. [142]
Some research suggests Trump's rhetoric causes an increased incidence of hate crimes. [143] [144] [145] During the 2016 campaign, he urged or praised physical attacks against protesters or reporters. [146] [147] Since then, some defendants prosecuted for hate crimes or violent acts cited Trump's rhetoric in arguing that they were not culpable or should receive a lighter sentence. [148] In August 2019 it was reported that a man who allegedly assaulted a minor for perceived disrespect toward the national anthem had cited Trump's rhetoric in his own defense. [149] In August 2019, a nationwide review by ABC News identified at least 36 criminal cases in which Trump was invoked in direct connection with violence or threats of violence. Of these, 29 were based around someone echoing presidential rhetoric, while the other seven were someone protesting it or not having direct linkage. [150]
In 1983, Trump received the Jewish National Fund Tree of Life Award, after he helped fund two playgrounds, a park, and a reservoir in Israel. [151] [152] In 1986, he received the Ellis Island Medal of Honor in recognition of "patriotism, tolerance, brotherhood and diversity", [153] and in 1995 was awarded the President's Medal from the Freedoms Foundation for his support of youth programs. [154] He has been awarded five honorary doctorates, but one was revoked by Robert Gordon University in 2015 after Trump called for a Muslim ban, citing Trump's speech being "wholly incompatible ... with the ethos and values of the university". The remaining awards are Lehigh University's honorary doctorate of laws in 1988, Wagner College's honorary doctorate of humane letters in 2004, and Liberty University's honorary doctorates of business and law in 2012 and 2017 respectively. [155]
In December 2016, Time named Trump as its "Person of the Year", [156] but Trump took issue with the magazine for referring to him as the "President of the Divided States of America". [157] In the same month, he was named Financial Times Person of the Year [158] and was ranked by Forbes the second-most powerful person in the world after Vladimir Putin. [159] As president, Trump received the Collar of The Order of Abdulaziz al Saud from Saudi Arabia in 2017. [160]
Donald John Trump is an American politician, media personality, and businessman who is serving as the 47th president of the United States since 2025. A member of the Republican Party, he previously served as the 45th president from 2017 to 2021.
Donald John Trump Jr., often nicknamed Don Jr., is an American businessman. He is the eldest child of U.S. President Donald Trump and his first wife Ivana Trump.
Eric Frederick Trump is an American businessman, activist, and former reality television presenter. He is the third child and second son of the president of the United States Donald Trump and his first wife Ivana Trump.
Breitbart News Network is an American far-right syndicated news, opinion, and commentary website founded in mid-2007 by American conservative commentator Andrew Breitbart. Its content has been described as misogynistic, xenophobic, and racist by various academics and journalists. The site has published a number of conspiracy theories and intentionally misleading stories. Posts originating from the Breitbart News Facebook page are among the most widely shared political content on Facebook.
One America News Network (OANN), also known as One America News (OAN), is a far-right, pro-Trump cable channel founded by Robert Herring Sr. and owned by Herring Networks, Inc., that launched on July 4, 2013. The network is headquartered in San Diego, California, and operates news bureaus in Washington, D.C., and New York City.
The political positions of Donald Trump, the 45th president and 47th president of the United States, have frequently changed. Trump has been primarily called a protectionist on trade. He has also been called and calls himself a populist, semi-isolationist, nationalist and other political categories.
"Make America Great Again" is an American political slogan and political movement most recently popularized by Donald Trump during his successful presidential campaigns in 2016 and in 2024. "MAGA" is also used to refer to Trump's political base, or to an individual or group of individuals from within that base. The slogan became a pop culture phenomenon, seeing widespread use and spawning numerous variants in the arts, entertainment and politics, being used by both supporters and opponents of Trump's presidency and as the name of the Super PAC Make America Great Again Inc.
Donald Trump, the president of the United States, has a history of speech and actions that have been viewed by scholars and the public as racist or sympathetic to white supremacy. Journalists, friends, family, and former employees have accused him of fueling racism in the United States. Trump has repeatedly denied accusations of racism. Conservative commentators point to the time he stated "whether you are black or brown or white, we all bleed the same red blood of patriots" as an example of him not being a racist.
r/The_Donald was a subreddit where participants created discussions and internet memes in support of U.S. president Donald Trump. Initially created in June 2015 following the announcement of Trump's presidential campaign, the community grew to over 790,000 subscribers who described themselves as "Patriots". The community was banned in June 2020 for violating Reddit rules on harassment and targeting. It was ranked as one of the most active communities on Reddit in the late 2010s.
Kayleigh Michelle McEnany is an American conservative political commentator, television personality, and writer who served the administration of Donald Trump as the 33rd White House press secretary from April 2020 to January 2021.
The social policy of the Donald Trump administration was generally socially conservative. As of 2016, Donald Trump described himself as pro-life with exceptions for rape, incest, and circumstances endangering the life of the mother. He said he was committed to appointing justices who may overturn the ruling in Roe v. Wade. Trump appointed three Supreme Court justices during his presidency. All of them later went on to vote in the majority opinion of Dobbs v. Jackson Women's Health Organization, the Supreme Court case overturning Roe v. Wade and ending federal abortion rights nationwide.
Sarah Elizabeth Huckabee Sanders is an American politician serving as the 47th governor of Arkansas since 2023. Sanders is the daughter of Mike Huckabee, who served from 1996 to 2007 as Arkansas's 44th governor. A member of the Republican Party, she was the 31st White House press secretary, serving under President Donald Trump from 2017 to 2019. Sanders was the third woman to be White House press secretary. She also served as a senior advisor on Trump's 2016 presidential campaign. Sanders became the Republican nominee in the 2022 Arkansas gubernatorial election and won, defeating Democratic nominee Chris Jones.
Donald Trump, a member of the Republican Party, sought re-election in the 2020 United States presidential election. He was inaugurated as president of the United States on January 20, 2017, and filed for re-election with the Federal Election Commission (FEC) on the same day. This was Trump's third run for President, his second with the Republican Party, and the only campaign Trump ran as an incumbent.
Covfefe is a word, widely presumed to be a typographical error, that Donald Trump used in a viral tweet when he was in his first term as President of the United States. It quickly became an Internet meme.
Donald Trump's use of social media attracted attention worldwide since he joined Twitter in May 2009. Over nearly twelve years, Trump tweeted around 57,000 times, including about 8,000 times during the 2016 election campaign and over 25,000 times during his presidency. The White House said the tweets should be considered official statements. When Twitter banned Trump from the platform in January 2021 during the final days of his term, his handle @realDonaldTrump had over 88.9 million followers. On November 19, 2022, Twitter's new owner, Elon Musk, reinstated his account, although Trump had stated he would not use it in favor of his own social media platform, Truth Social. The first tweet since 2021 was made in August 2023 about his mugshot from Fulton County Jail, but the account remained inactive until he tweeted again in August 2024.
Donald Trump has made tens of thousands of false or misleading claims, including during his first and second terms as President of the United States. Fact-checkers at The Washington Post documented 30,573 false or misleading claims during his presidential term, an average of about 21 per day. The Toronto Star tallied 5,276 false claims from January 2017 to June 2019, an average of six per day. Commentators and fact-checkers have described Trump's mendacity as unprecedented in American politics, and the consistency of falsehoods a distinctive part of his business and political identities. Scholarly analysis of Trump's tweets found significant evidence of an intent to deceive.
Daniel Dale is a Canadian journalist known for rebutting a large number of false claims made by United States President Donald Trump during his 2016 presidential campaign and presidency. Dale credits an encounter with Toronto Mayor Rob Ford while covering the mayor and his brother Doug for the Toronto Star as the inspiration for developing his brand of adversarial journalism.
Since 2025, Donald Trump has been the 47th and current president of the United States, having won the 2024 presidential election. He previously served a non-consecutive term from 2017 to 2021 as the 45th president.
It has long been a truism that politicians lie, but with the entry of Donald Trump into the U.S. political domain, the frequency, degree, and impact of lying in politics are now unprecedented [...] Donald Trump is different. By all metrics and counting schemes, his lies are off the charts. We simply have not seen such an accomplished and effective liar before in U.S. politics.
President Trump, historians and consultants in both political parties agree, appears to have taken what the writer Hannah Arendt once called 'the conflict between truth and politics' to an entirely new level.
'When before have we seen a president so indifferent to the distinction between truth and falsehood, or so eager to blur that distinction?' presidential historian Michael R. Beschloss said of Trump in 2018.
White House scholars and other students of government agree there has never been a president like Donald Trump, whose volume of falsehoods, misstatements and serial exaggerations –on matters large and wincingly small –place him 'in a class by himself', as Texas A&M's George Edwards put it.
'We've had presidents that have lied or misled the country, but we've never had a serial liar before. And that's what we're dealing with here,' said Douglas Brinkley, the prominent Rice University presidential historian.
We've never had a president with such a casual relationship to the truth ... The sheer rate of Trump's untruth-telling is staggering. It is unprecedented.
... a president who is delivering untruths on an unprecedented scale. Mr Trump did this both while running for president, and he has continued to do so in office. There is no precedent for this amount of untruths in the U.S.
Donald Trump lies so often that some have wondered whether he has poisoned the well [...] We expect politicians to stretch the truth. But Trump is a whole different animal. He lies as a policy.
We all lie, but we don't lie like President Trump. He is the most extravagant, reckless, inexhaustible fibber of our era.
Never in modern presidential politics has a major candidate made false statements as routinely as Trump has.
In the 12 years of FactCheck.org's existence, we've never seen his match.
African politicians and diplomats labeled U.S. President Donald Trump a racist on Friday.