Trump’s social media team gets aggressive with memes, AI ...Middle East

News by : (The Hill) -

The traditionally staid and formal official White House social media accounts have under the second Trump administration become a fertile ground for memes, images generated by artificial intelligence (AI) and other unorthodox ways to tweak opponents and promote the president’s agenda.

There was the Valentine’s Day post that offered a deportation-focused twist on a “roses are red” poem.

There was a 15-minute video streamed on a loop that featured an animated image of President Trump signing papers in the Oval Office accompanied by “lo-fi” music to tout the administration’s first 100 days.

And there was a "Star Wars" themed post on May 4 that featured an AI-created image of a muscular Trump wielding a red lightsaber and a caption describing his opponents as “the Empire.”

Each of those posts has gone viral or captured the attention of both the president’s supporters and his critics. Some of the posts, such as one referencing a viral debate about whether 100 men or one gorilla would win in a fight, have tapped into an internet phenomenon of the moment.

Critics have rolled their eyes and pushed back at some of the content, arguing it is inappropriate coming from an official government account or that it trivializes serious issues. 

But all of the posts serve a purpose of driving a message, according to administration officials.

“I would describe this team as the department of offense,” White House deputy communications director Kaelan Dorr told The Hill in an interview.

“We view the role of our digital outreach to obviously not only communicate effectively and transparently what the administration is doing on behalf of the American people, but it's also a very critical component of how much we keep the foot on the gas and how much we stay on offense,” Dorr added.

Administration officials said it is a relatively small team of roughly a dozen people that handles its social media presence. That group works on the main White House social media accounts, as well as a rapid response account that quickly shares comments from Trump and other administration officials or potentially damaging remarks from Democrats.

One administration official described it as a “collaborative environment” with a streamlined process for posting that doesn’t require approval from layers of senior aides. That allows the accounts to quickly seize on a viral moment or try something new that might be attention-grabbing based on the news cycle.

The official White House account last week shared an image of Kilmar Abrego Garcia, a man living in Maryland who was mistakenly deported to El Salvador and whose case has become a flash point in the debate over Trump’s deportation efforts, edited to resemble the “Hope” posters from the 2008 Obama campaign. The image read “MS-13,” a reference to Abrego Garcia’s alleged gang ties.

Seizing on a recent internet debate over whether 100 men or one gorilla would win in a fight, the White House account shared an image that read “142,000+ deported aliens vs. 1 President Trump,” tying the viral discussion back to the administration’s immigration crackdown.

Then there was the AI-generated image of Trump dressed as the pope, which originated in a post on the president’s Truth Social account and was later shared on official White House social media channels.

The image was posted less than two weeks after Pope Francis’s death and just days before cardinals gather at the Vatican to elect a new Catholic leader. Multiple Catholic officials, including New York’s Cardinal Timothy Dolan, pushed back on the post as inappropriate.

“Give me a break. It was just, somebody did it in fun. It’s fine, have to have a little fun, don’t you?” Trump told reporters Monday when asked about the pope image.

The White House’s more provocative social media posts are part of a broader strategy of outreach and engagement to connect with various audiences.

“We’re not just memeing people to death,” an administration official told The Hill.

In addition to memes and AI images, the White House accounts share more traditional fact sheets and video clips promoting its agenda and accomplishments. The White House has held multiple “media row” days on campus, including bringing in conservative influencers last week to get out its message around the first 100 days of Trump’s second term.

Trump himself has engaged with the press in more traditional ways, even as he has targeted outlets like The Associated Press and NPR. Trump sat for interviews last week alone with ABC News and NBC News, and he fields questions from members of the White House press corps on a near-daily basis.

But it is the more controversial social media posts that have frequently grabbed attention and have differentiated the second Trump administration’s online strategy from the president’s first term in some ways. Administration officials also argued it is reflective of the type of freewheeling approach that has come to define Trump and his brand of politics.

“I think a large part of why we won in November is because people realized that the opposition does not live in the same world that they do. They're not humorous, they don't seek to drive engagement or a conversation, and it's not fun,” an administration official told The Hill.

The official said that comes through to voters, and “I think it speaks to the real crux of, like, why November went down the way it did.”

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