List of nicknames used by Donald Trump

Former U.S. President Donald Trump became widely known during the 2016 United States presidential election and his subsequent presidency for using nicknames to criticize, insult, or otherwise express commentary about media figures, politicians, and foreign leaders.[1][2][3][4][5]

The list excludes commonly-used hypocorisms such as "Mike" for "Michael" or "Steve" for "Steven", unless they are original to Trump. Nicknames that Trump did not originate are annotated with footnotes.

The list also includes nicknames used by figures associated with Trump, and nicknames he has promoted via retweeting.

Domestic political figures

Nickname Personal name Notes
Basement Biden[6] Joe Biden Former U.S. senator from Delaware; 47th vice president of the United States; Trump's opponent who defeated him in the 2020 United States Presidential election; 46th president of the United States
Beijing Biden[7]
Crooked Joe Biden[8]
Sleepy Joe[9]
Slow Joe[10]
Little Michael[11] Michael Bloomberg 108th mayor of New York City; 2020 Democratic presidential candidate; CEO of Bloomberg L.P.
Mini Mike Bloomberg[12][13]
Da Nang Dick[14] Richard Blumenthal Democratic U.S. senator from Connecticut; 23rd attorney general of Connecticut
Gov. Jerry "Moonbeam" Brown[15][lower-alpha 1] Jerry Brown 34th and 39th governor of California; 31st attorney general of California; former secretary of state of California, 6th chair of the California Democratic Party
My Bush[16][17][lower-alpha 2][18][19] George P. Bush 28th Land Commissioner of Texas
Low Energy Jeb[1] Jeb Bush 43rd governor of Florida; 2016 Republican presidential candidate
Alfred E. Neuman[20] Pete Buttigieg Former mayor of South Bend, Indiana; 2020 Democratic presidential candidate; 19th United States secretary of transportation
Boot-Edge-Edge[21][lower-alpha 3]
Coco Chow[22] Elaine Chao 24th secretary of labor and 18th secretary of transportation
Crazy Liz Cheney[23] Liz Cheney U.S. representative for Wyoming's at-large congressional district; former chair of the House Republican Conference
Wild Bill[24] Bill Clinton 42nd president of the United States; 40th and 42nd governor of Arkansas; 50th attorney general of Arkansas; former chair of the National Governors Association
Crazy Hillary[25] Hillary Clinton Former first lady of the United States; former U.S. secretary of state; 2016 Democratic presidential nominee
Crooked Hillary[1] (retired)[8]
Lyin' Hillary[26][27]
Leakin' James Comey[28] James Comey Former director of the Federal Bureau of Investigation fired by Trump; former United States deputy attorney general; former United States acting attorney general
Lyin' James Comey[29]
Shadey James Comey[30]
Slimeball James Comey[31]
Slippery James Comey[24]
Lyin' Ted[1] Ted Cruz Former solicitor general of Texas; U.S. senator from Texas; 2016 Republican presidential candidate
Ron DeSanctimonious[32] Ron DeSantis 46th governor of Florida
Ron DeSanctus[33]
Jeff Flakey[34] Jeff Flake Former U.S. senator from Arizona; former member of the U.S. House of Representatives from Arizona
Peekaboo James[35] Letitia James Attorney general of New York
Big Jim[36] Jim Justice 36th governor of West Virginia
1 for 38[1][37][lower-alpha 4] John Kasich 69th governor of Ohio; 2016 Republican presidential candidate; former U.S. representative from Ohio's 12th district
1 for 41[37][lower-alpha 4]
1 for 44[37][lower-alpha 4]
Mad dog[lower-alpha 5] James Mattis 26th secretary of defense
My Kevin[38] Kevin McCarthy 55th Speaker of the U.S. House of Representatives; former House Minority Leader; former House Majority Leader
Broken Old Crow[39] Mitch McConnell U.S. Senator from Kentucky and Senate Minority Leader; former Senate Majority Leader
Evan McMuffin[40][41] Evan McMullin Former Central Intelligence Agency operations officer; 2016 independent presidential candidate
Disaster from Alaska[42] Lisa Murkowski U.S. senator from Alaska
That dog[43] Omarosa Manigault Newman Former The Apprentice contestant; aide to Trump
Wacky Omarosa[44]
Evita[45] Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez U.S. representative from New York
Crazy Nancy[46] Nancy Pelosi 52nd Speaker of the U.S. House of Representatives; former House Minority Leader
Nervous Nancy[47]
My Mike[48] Mike Pompeo Former Director of the Central Intelligence Agency and 70th Secretary of State
Wacky Jacky[49] Jacky Rosen U.S. senator from Nevada, former U.S. representative from Nevada's 3rd congressional district
Mr. Peepers (denied by Trump)[50] Rod Rosenstein United States deputy attorney general
Little Marco[1] Marco Rubio U.S. senator from Florida; 2016 Republican presidential candidate; former speaker of the Florida House of Representatives
Crazy Bernie[51] Bernie Sanders U.S. senator from Vermont; 2016 & 2020 Democratic presidential candidate
Little Ben Sasse[52][53] Ben Sasse U.S. senator from Nebraska
Pencil Neck[54] Adam Schiff U.S. representative for California's 28th congressional district; chair of House Intelligence Committee; former California State Senator
Liddle' Adam Schiff[55]
Shifty Schiff[56]
Cryin' Chuck[57] Chuck Schumer U.S. senator from New York and senate majority leader; former senate minority leader
Mr. Magoo (denied by Trump)[58] Jeff Sessions 84th United States attorney general; former U.S. senator from Alabama; former attorney general of Alabama
Big Luther[59][lower-alpha 6] Luther Strange Former U.S. senator from Alabama; 47th attorney general of Alabama
Goofy Elizabeth Warren[60][61][62] Elizabeth Warren U.S. senator from Massachusetts; former chair of the Congressional Oversight Panel; 2020 Democratic presidential candidate
Pocahontas[1][63]
Crazy Maxine Waters[64] Maxine Waters U.S. representative for California's 43rd congressional district; chair of the House Financial Services Committee
Low-IQ Maxine Waters[65]
That woman from Michigan[66] Gretchen Whitmer 49th governor of Michigan
Young Kin[67] Glenn Youngkin 74th governor of Virginia

Foreign leaders

Nickname Personal name Notes
Animal Assad[68] Bashar al-Assad President of Syria
Rocket Man[1] Kim Jong-un Supreme Leader of North Korea
Little Rocket Man[69][70]
Juan Trump[71][72] Andrés Manuel López Obrador President of Mexico
Justin from Canada[73] Justin Trudeau Prime Minister of Canada

Media figures

Nickname Personal name Notes
Morning Psycho[74] Joe Scarborough Co-host of Morning Joe; former U.S. representative from Florida
Psycho Joe[1]
Little George[75][76] George Stephanopoulos Chief anchor and chief political correspondent of ABC News; former White House communications director and senior advisor to President Bill Clinton
Sleepy Eyes[1][77] Chuck Todd Moderator of Meet the Press
Little Katy[78] Katy Tur Correspondent for NBC News and a host of MSNBC Reports
Little Jeff Zucker[1] Jeff Zucker President of CNN Worldwide

Groups of people

Nickname Group members Notes
13 Hardened Democrats[79]
Names of attorneys
Attorneys working on Robert Mueller's investigation of potential ties between the Trump campaign and Russia. The press identified thirteen of the seventeen attorneys as either being registered to vote as Democrats, or as making contributions to Democratic candidates. Those not identified as such denote with a star().[79] It is unclear whether this was the criteria Trump used to distinguish 13 out of 17 individuals since Trump did not detail who are the thirteen individuals that he included in the nicknames.
13 Angry Democrats[80]
17 Angry Democrats[81]
AOC Plus 3[82][lower-alpha 7] Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez
Ilhan Omar
Ayanna Pressley
Rashida Tlaib
Informal political grouping of four Democratic members of the U.S. House of Representatives elected in 2018
The Squad[82][lower-alpha 8]
O'Biden[83] Respectively, the president and vice president of the United States from 2009 to 2017; Biden was Trump's opponent in the 2020 United States Presidential election.

Other people

Nickname Personal name Notes
The Pakistani mystery man[84] Imran Awan Former information technology specialist for Democratic lawmakers, including U.S. representative Debbie Wasserman Schultz
Jeff Bozo[85] Jeff Bezos Founder, chairman, and former CEO and president of Amazon
Punchy[86] Robert De Niro Actor, producer, and director
Sir Charles[87] Charles Goldstein Real estate lawyer; Holocaust victims advocate
Little Mac Miller[88] Mac Miller Rapper; released the song "Donald Trump" in 2011, which caused Trump and Miller to feud for years, with Trump demanding royalties since Miller used his name
Alexander the Great[89][90] Alexander Ovechkin Washington Capitals team captain
Dopey Sugar[91] Alan Sugar Host of The Apprentice (UK); counterpart of Trump's role on the US version of the show

Organizations

Nickname Official name Notes
Fake ABC News[92] ABC News News division of Disney General Entertainment Content division of The Walt Disney Company
Globalist's Club for NO Growth[93] Club for Growth Conservative organization
Clinton News Network[94][lower-alpha 9] CNN Multinational cable news channel owned by Warner Bros. Discovery
Fake News CNN[95][lower-alpha 10]
Fraud News CNN[96]
Low ratings CNN[97]
Very Fake News[98][lower-alpha 10]
Con-Cast[99] Comcast American multinational telecommunications conglomerate
D.C. Wolves[100] Democratic Party American political party
Democrat Party[101][lower-alpha 11]
Radical Left Democrats[102]
The Losers Project[103][104] The Lincoln Project Political action committee working against the reelection of Trump which targets conservatives
Lincoln Pervert Project[93]
MSDNC[105] MSNBC American news-based pay television cable channel owned by NBCUniversal
Corrupt New York Times[106] The New York Times Newspaper
Failing New York Times[1]
Old Grey Lady[107][lower-alpha 12]
Amazon The Washington Post[108] The Washington Post Newspaper owned by Jeff Bezos, founder and former CEO of Amazon
Lobbyist The Washington Post[109]
Unselect Committee[110] United States House Select Committee on the January 6 Attack A select committee of the U.S. House of Representatives to investigate the attack on the U.S. Capitol on January 6, 2021

Television programs

Nickname Official name Notes
Deface the Nation[111] Face the Nation A weekly talk show on CBS
Meet the Depressed[112] Meet the Press A morning talk show on NBC
Morning Joke[113] Morning Joe A daily talk show on MSNBC

Miscellaneous

Nickname Usual name Notes
Ukraine Witch Hunt[114] Trump–Ukraine scandal A conversation between Trump and Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelenskyy where an intelligence analyst who listened in on the conversation blew the whistle and filed a complaint.
Russia Collusion Delusion[115] Trump's alleged involvement in the Russian interference in the 2016 United States elections
Russia, Russia, Russia[116]
Presidential harassment[117][lower-alpha 13] Criticism of Trump by others
Trump derangement syndrome[118][lower-alpha 14]
The Age of Trump[119] The Trump presidency
Non-Infrastructure Bill[120] Build Back Better Plan
Crooked Press[121] Mainstream media publications
Dishonest Press[122]
Fake News Media[123][124][lower-alpha 10]
Kung Flu[125] COVID-19 Disease that caused the COVID-19 pandemic
Plague from China[126]
China Virus[127][128][129] Severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 Virus that causes COVID-19
Chinese Virus[130][131]
Perfect Georgia Phone Call[132] Trump–Raffensperger phone call
Stormy "Horseface" Daniels Extortion Plot[133] Stormy Daniels–Donald Trump scandal

See also

Notes

  1. Brown has had the nickname "Moonbeam", coined by Mike Royko, since the 1970s, predating Trump's use of the nickname. See McKinley, Jesse (March 6, 2010). "How Jerry Brown Became 'Governor Moonbeam'". The New York Times. Archived from the original on January 30, 2021. Retrieved April 5, 2018.
  2. The name was in reference to the fact that George P. Bush was the only member of the Bush family to publically support Trump, Most of the Bush family, including George's father Jeb Bush and former presidents George H. W. Bush (41st president of the United States) and George W. Bush (43rd president of the United States) denounced Trump.
  3. Boot-Edge-Edge is a mnemonic aid that Pete Buttigieg used to help with the pronunciation of his last name. See Gabriel, Trip (March 28, 2019). "Pete Buttigieg (It's 'Boot-Edge-Edge') Is Making Waves in the 2020 Race". The New York Times. Archived from the original on January 13, 2021. Retrieved May 10, 2019.
  4. The name was in reference to Kasich winning only one state during the Republican primaries.
  5. "Mad dog" is not original to Trump. Mattis acquired that nickname during his service in the Marines. See Ward, Alex (September 18, 2018). "From "Mad Dog" to "Democrat": How Defense Secretary Mattis lost Trump". Vox. Archived from the original on November 9, 2020. Retrieved October 16, 2018.
  6. The nickname has been in use since at least 2010. During Strange's U.S. Senate campaign in 2017, Trump incorrectly implied that he was the first to use it.
  7. The nickname "AOC Plus 3" was originally coined by Laura Ingraham before Trump first used it days later. See Garcia, Victor (July 17, 2019). "Ingraham on AOC's America vs. Trump's". Fox News. Archived from the original on July 24, 2019. Retrieved July 25, 2019.
  8. The moniker "The Squad" originated in a November 2018 Instagram post by Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez and was used by the members of the group and the media before Trump used it. See ""The Squad": How Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, Ayanna Pressley, Rashida Tlaib, Ilhan Omar got their nickname". CBS News. July 17, 2019. Archived from the original on July 17, 2019. Retrieved July 17, 2019.
  9. The nickname has been in use since at least 2007. See Bosman, Julie (November 17, 2007). "A Clinton Friend's Role Sets Off Intense Criticism of CNN and a Re-examination". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Archived from the original on November 9, 2020. Retrieved February 12, 2021.
  10. Hillary Clinton has been credited with using the term "Fake News" prior to Trump. She was documented to have used the term on December 8, 2016, in what was believed to have been a reference to the Pizzagate conspiracy theory. Trump was documented to have first used the term on January 11, 2017. See Borchers, Callum (January 3, 2018). "How Hillary Clinton might have inspired Trump's 'fake news' attacks". The Washington Post. Archived from the original on February 6, 2021. Retrieved September 22, 2019.
  11. Not original to Trump. See the article Democrat Party (epithet) for more details about the use of the term as an epithet.
  12. The nickname "Old Grey Lady" and variations have been used to describe the newspaper by various sources since the 1950s. See Dwilson, Stephanie Dube (September 16, 2019). "The 'Old Grey Lady' in Trump's Tweet Is an Old Nickname for the New York Times". Heavy.com. Archived from the original on September 18, 2019. Retrieved September 18, 2019.
  13. Senator Mitch McConnell has been credited with coming up with this nickname. See Graham, David (January 3, 2019). "Trump's New Catchphrase Is an Attempt to Delegitimize Dissent". The Atlantic. Archived from the original on November 7, 2020. Retrieved September 22, 2019.
  14. Not original to Trump, see article Trump derangement syndrome.

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