Trump warns communism bigger threat to US than World Wars or 9/11
Synopsis
Key Takeaways
President Donald Trump on Wednesday, 8 July declared that the spread of communist ideology posed a greater danger to the United States than either the World Wars or the September 11 attacks — framing it as an internal ideological threat more corrosive than any external military assault the country has faced. The remarks came at a news conference following the NATO summit in Ankara.
What Trump Said
Trump argued that communist ideas were being repackaged under softer political labels to make them more palatable, but that the underlying ideology remained destructive. 'Communism is a disaster. It's been proven to be for thousands of years under different names,' he said.
In a striking rhetorical flourish, Trump suggested he could himself have been a highly effective communist propagandist — precisely because the ideology is easy to sell before its consequences become apparent. 'I would be the greatest communist in history. I'd be right up there with Lenin,' he said. 'You've got free rent for the rest of your life. What they don't say is that you'll be living in squalor in 12 months.'
The Ideological Framing
Trump drew a direct line between labels such as 'radical socialist', 'communist', and 'social Democrat', arguing the distinctions were cosmetic. 'When they say social Democrats... it sounds so nice. It's not nice. It's a very dangerous term,' he said.
He also noted that he had taken the anti-communist message to international audiences, including on social media platform TikTok. 'I do talk about it, and I talk about it on TikTok, and I talk about it everywhere. I talk about it here, and you're right, it has become international,' Trump said.
Hispanic Americans and the Communist Experience
Trump cited his support among Hispanic Americans as evidence that lived experience of communist or socialist governance shapes political outlook. 'One of the reasons I do so well with Hispanic people... is because a lot of them came from countries that were essentially communist,' he said, arguing that personal or family exposure to such regimes made voters more receptive to his warnings.
Domestic Political Targets
The President also directed criticism at domestic political opponents he accused of advancing communist ideas, describing them as 'very dangerous in many ways.' He did not name specific individuals at the news conference.
Throughout his presidency, Trump has increasingly framed domestic political debates as a binary contest between free-market capitalism and socialism, often citing what he described as record investment and strong economic performance under his administration as evidence that capitalism delivers where communism fails.
Broader Context
The Ankara remarks represent an escalation in Trump's ideological rhetoric, which has grown more pointed since his return to the White House. This is not the first time he has invoked communism as a frame for domestic politics — the language has appeared consistently in his rally speeches and social media posts — but the NATO summit setting gave the warnings an explicitly international dimension. The comments arrive as the administration continues to position itself as the global standard-bearer of free-market democracy against what it characterises as a rising tide of socialist governance.