Trump Posts More Than Two Dozen Truth Social Messages in 38 Minutes
Donald Trump posted more than two dozen times on Truth Social between 10:15 and 10:53 p.m. EST, and trump posts in the burst centered largely on Barack Obama. Many of the messages accused Obama of treason and other wrongdoing, while the rest targeted several other political figures and called for arrests.
The late-night run of posts showed a short, concentrated use of Trump’s account: roughly half the messages were aimed at Obama, and only one post in the series was written by Trump himself. The rest were reposts from apparent supporters.
Obama at the center
Trump’s posts accused Obama of attempting a coup, using Hillary Clinton’s email server under a pseudonym, and personally collecting $120 million from the Affordable Care Act. One of the claims about the health law appears to have originated from a satirical website, but it was still part of the stream Trump amplified.
That made Obama the dominant target of the series. The account did not stay on one claim for long; it moved from treason accusations to broader charges of wrongdoing in rapid succession.
Other targets in the feed
The remaining posts attacked Mark Kelly, James Comey, Jack Smith, and Hillary Clinton. Trump wanted Kelly, Comey, Smith, and Clinton arrested, and some posts urged the Justice Department to move faster to apprehend those targets or others.
Trump also wrote yesterday, “I was hunted by some very bad people. Now I’m the hunter.” The late-night series matched that posture, but it did so through reposts from apparent supporters rather than through sustained original writing from Trump himself.
Truth Social and the Iran war
The timing stood out because Trump has recently used his social-media accounts to try to scare Iranians or reassure oil markets. This burst did neither. Instead, it ignored the Iran war he is currently waging and concentrated on domestic political enemies.
For readers tracking Trump’s account, the practical takeaway is simple: the feed can swing quickly from foreign-policy messaging to personal attacks and arrest demands, with little warning and little original text from Trump himself. In this case, the sharpest move was not a policy announcement but the speed and volume of the repost chain.