Trump Floods Late Night Truth Social With Obama Attacks

Trump Floods Late Night Truth Social With Obama Attacks

Donald Trump used late night Truth Social to fire off more than two dozen posts in 38 minutes, turning his account into a rapid-response stream of accusations against Barack Obama and other political targets. Roughly half of the messages centered on Obama, making him the main focus of the burst.

Obama Took the Biggest Share

From 10:15 to 10:53 p.m. EDT, Trump’s feed accused Obama of treason, a coup attempt, using Hillary Clinton’s email server under a pseudonym, and collecting $120 million from the Affordable Care Act. Those are not scattered asides; they form the core of a concentrated run at a former president, and they land in a format that rewards speed over detail.

Only one message in the series was written by Trump himself. The rest were reposts from apparent supporters, which gives the stream a split function: his account amplifies the charge, while the reposted material supplies the volume. Trump’s line, “I was hunted by some very bad people. Now I’m the hunter,” fits that pattern exactly.

Kelly, Comey, Smith, Clinton

The remaining posts targeted Mark Kelly, James Comey, Jack Smith, and Hillary Clinton, with Trump wanting each of them arrested. The messages also pressed the Justice Department to move faster against those targets, pushing the account from accusation into pressure campaign.

A handful of random videos in the same burst appeared to show Black people misbehaving in public. That detail sits inside a broader pattern the article describes as Trump’s long-running fixation on Black Americans as a source of crime, and it sharpens the political tone of the feed rather than softening it.

What the Night Revealed

The overnight posting binge landed while Trump was also using social media in recent weeks to try to scare Iranians or reassure oil markets, which makes this one less like a stray outburst than a repeatable communications habit. Barack Obama did not order investigations of rivals, try to overturn an election, or use the presidency as a vehicle of profit; Trump has done all of those things, and that contrast is the story inside the posts.

For readers tracking Trump’s online behavior, the immediate takeaway is simple: he is not just posting more, he is using late night windows to launder accusations through reposts and concentrate attention on a fixed list of enemies. The next thing to watch is whether that tactic keeps shifting from political noise into something the Justice Department has to answer in real time.

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