Americans opened their new passports and froze. Staring back at them: Donald Trump’s face, stamped over the US Constitution,
in a design timed for the nation’s 250th birthday. Within hours, social media exploded.
Some cheered. Others saw something far darker. Critics warned of dictators. Supporters shouted patriot… Continues…
The limited-edition “Trump passport” instantly became a symbol of the country’s divide. To some, it’s a bold celebration
of America’s semiquincentennial, tying a president’s image to founding-era iconography and a season of grand, flag-waving events.
To others, it feels like a jarring break with the tradition of political neutrality on official documents, turning a simple travel ID into a statement of allegiance.
Beyond the anger and memes, deeper anxieties surfaced. Detractors fear it normalizes personality cult politics and risks awkward
encounters at foreign borders, especially in countries where Trump remains controversial. Supporters counter that critics are overreacting and that pride in a sitting
president is hardly authoritarian. For now, the rollout is limited, but the argument it ignited is anything but
: a fight over what patriotism should look like—and who gets to define it.