President Barack Obama responds to Trump’s controversial monkey video
In the latest chapter of an already chaotic political era, former President Barack Obama has finally broken his silence after sitting President Donald Trump shared a now-deleted video depicting him and Michelle Obama as apes—a trope long criticised as racially offensive and steeped in ugly history.
During a frank interview with political commentator Brian Tyler Cohen, Obama didn’t mince words. The 44th President described the episode not just as hurtful, but as symptomatic of a larger breakdown in public discourse—calling the spectacle a “clown show” that reflects how far decorum has fallen in political leadership.
Trump’s social post, originally shared on his Truth Social account and later removed after intense backlash, included a short clip juxtaposing the Obamas’ faces onto primates—an image that civil rights leaders, lawmakers from both parties, and media observers called deeply troubling and racially insensitive. Even Republican Senator Tim Scott branded it one of the most racist moments seen from the Administration.

The White House initially defended the clip as part of a broader meme referencing The Lion King before blaming an unnamed staffer and taking it down. Trump himself refused to apologise, insisting he hadn’t seen the offensive portion of the post.
Obama’s response, however, steered the conversation toward what really matters to everyday Americans—the erosion of respect in political debate and the importance of upholding dignity at every level of public life.