By Hana Kiros
Friday, February 06, 2026
Donald Trump supercharged his political career by
claiming that Barack Obama wasn’t American. Yesterday, 16 minutes before
midnight, the president’s account on Truth Social posted a video that suggests
Obama isn’t even human. It briefly shows the head of the first Black president
and that of his wife superimposed onto the bodies of apes. They dance along to
“The Lion Sleeps Tonight.”
The video, which Trump’s account shared twice, seems to
be a screen recording. Its first minute shows a clip promoting the lie that
voting-machine tampering handed Joe Biden the presidency in 2020. Then, someone
seems to swipe up, and the clip depicting the Obamas as apes flashes into
focus.
The clip is on the screen for only a moment before the
recording returns to the voting-machine video. And just before noon today, both
posts of the video were removed from the president’s Truth Social account.
(When I asked why, a White House official who declined to provide their name
claimed that an unnamed employee “erroneously made the post.”)
In the interim, hundreds if not thousands of people
responded to the clip with enthusiasm. Immediately after the video was first posted
on Truth Social, the memecoin $APEBAMA was minted. Within 12 hours, more than
$4 million worth of $APEBAMA had been traded back and forth. In an X group with
the same name that now has hundreds of members, the pinned tweet implies that
the meme stock will succeed because of how outrageous the video is: “this is
pretty much on par with him calling Obama a nigga.” Some members posted their
own depictions of Obama as a monkey or ape. The ape video’s apparent creator,
the X user @xerias_x, reposted the full video to their X account early this
morning. Besides the Obamas, the video shows a menagerie of Democratic
politicians as animals, bowing down to Trump, who appears as a lion. It now has
more than 1 million views. (@xerias_x also seems to be the originator
of an AI-generated video Trump reposted in October that shows the president
raining down what appears to be excrement on protesters from the sky.)
The “joke” that Trump’s account spread is plainly
sinister. The idea that Black people sit somewhere between white people and
apes has long been used to justify cruelty. In 1377, a historian wrote that
Africans “have attributes that are quite similar to those of dumb animals,”
meaning they “are, as a whole, submissive to slavery.” Cartoons circulated
during the Civil War were printed with images similar to the one Trump posted:
One labels a monkey holding a book upside down as a NEGRO-MAN; another depicts
a Black man on all fours, accompanied by the words WHAR’S JEFF DAVIS. In 1906,
a man born in what was then the Belgian Congo, Ota Benga, was displayed at the
Bronx Zoo in a cage with an orangutan. In 1975, white teenagers harassed Black
students desegregating a Boston public school with the chant “Two, four, six,
eight, assassinate the nigger apes.”
The ape caricature still colors how Black people are
received in America. But this morning, the administration played the video off
for laughs. “This is from an internet meme video depicting President Trump as
the King of the Jungle and Democrats as characters from the Lion King,” White
House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt wrote in response to a comment request
before the Truth Social posts were removed. (The Lion King features a
monkey named Rafiki, but no apes appear in the film.)
The White House did not answer my questions about why the
administration initially defended the video, or why it remained up on the
president’s account for 12 hours. Even if a staffer did post the Obama video,
its message is resonant with the president’s past statements and actions. Trump
has called Somalis “low-IQ,” and his administration recently announced rules
that will ban
nearly 90 percent of African immigrant visa applicants.
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