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SupportedPoliticsLast updated: June 6, 2026

Trump Is A Bully

The claim that Donald Trump is a bully is supported by his decade-long deployment of demeaning nicknames against opponents, attacks on Gold Star families, retaliation against impeachment witnesses Ambassador Marie Yovanovitch and Lt. Col. Alexander Vindman, and a Committee to Protect Journalists tally of 1,339 hostile press tweets and 48 named attacks on individual reporters.

What we know

Trump has used language and tactics consistent with bullying throughout his public and political career. His demeaning nicknames - 'Lyin' Ted' (Cruz), 'Little Marco' (Rubio), 'Crooked Hillary' (Clinton), 'Sleepy Joe' (Biden) - are among the most documented rhetorical patterns in modern U.S. politics. The Columbia Journalism Review and Committee to Protect Journalists have analysed how these labels function not as ordinary insults but as deliberate weapons to dehumanize opponents and pre-emptively delegitimize criticism. Trump himself admitted the strategy on tape: 'You know why I do it? I do it to discredit you all and demean you all so that when you write negative stories about me no one will believe you.'

The tactic extends to private citizens and grieving families. In August 2016 Trump attacked Khizr and Ghazala Khan, the Gold Star parents of Captain Humayun Khan, killed in Iraq in 2004. When Khizr spoke at the DNC, Trump questioned whether Ghazala 'wasn't allowed to have anything to say,' implying misogynistic and anti-Muslim subtext - prompting rare bipartisan rebuke from Senators John McCain and Lindsey Graham.

Trump's bullying extended to using presidential power against officials who crossed him. Ambassador Marie Yovanovitch was recalled from Ukraine in May 2019 after a smear campaign by Trump allies including Rudy Giuliani. During her November 15, 2019 impeachment testimony, Trump tweeted attacks against her in real time - House Intelligence Chair Adam Schiff called it 'witness intimidation' on the spot. Lt. Col. Alexander Vindman was escorted out of the White House on February 7, 2020, two days after Trump's Senate acquittal, after testifying under subpoena. His lawyer said Trump 'decided to exact revenge.' CPJ documented 1,339 hostile media tweets from his 2016 announcement through end of 2018, with Trump naming individual journalists 48 times - leading to documented harassment campaigns against those reporters.

Common claims

  • Trump uses demeaning nicknames as a deliberate strategy.Supported - admitted on tape
  • Trump retaliated against impeachment witnesses.Supported - Yovanovitch tweet attack mid-testimony, Vindman fired
  • Trump attacked Gold Star parents at the DNC.Supported - Khan family, August 2016
  • Trump's media attacks have endangered journalists.Supported - CPJ tally of 1,339 hostile tweets, 48 named reporters
  • Nicknames are just normal political rough-and-tumble.Disputed - CJR analysis classifies them as a delegitimization technique