Donald Trump rang out 2025 with a late-night burst on Truth Social, unloading on political rivals in a string of angry posts that quickly drew backlash. The tirade, filled with personal attacks, once again put the spotlight on Trump’s combative online style as the New Year began
As 2025 drew to a close, US President Donald Trump didn’t dial down the drama. He dialed it up. In a string of late‑night posts on his own platform, Truth Social, Trump blasted political foes with harsh language and called on some to “rot in hell” just hours before the New Year.
The barrage came amid growing tensions over the imprisonment of former Colorado election clerk Tina Peters, a figure Trump and his supporters have championed. In one post targeting Colorado Governor Jared Polis and Mesa County District Attorney Dan Rubinstein, Trump wrote that they should “rot in hell” over Peters’ sentence.
Blasts at foes big and small
But Trump didn’t stop at local officials. His Truth Social feed lit up with posts attacking a range of opponents, echoing familiar grievances and spreading inflammatory narratives. Some of his messages leaned into long‑standing claims about election integrity, while others veered into personal attacks.
This style of communication—combative, unfiltered, and directly aimed at critics—has become a defining feature of Trump’s online presence, particularly on a platform like Truth Social that he owns and frequently uses to reach his base.
Reactions pour in
The backlash was swift from those on the receiving end of Trump’s ire.
Officials like Polis and Rubinstein, whom Trump singled out, pushed back sharply in public statements, highlighting factual inaccuracies in his posts and questioning the tone of his commentary.
Others in the news media and political commentary spheres described the late‑night barrage as emblematic of the president’s rhetorical style, which critics say fuels division even as supporters applaud him for “telling it like it is.”
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