Donald Trump ‘rattled’ as he’s booed at stadium he wants named after him

Donald Trump appeared visibly unsettled after being met with a wave of boos at a stadium he reportedly wants named after him.

On Sunday, November 9, the 79-year-old former president watched the Washington Commanders fall 44-22 to the visiting Detroit Lions at Northwest Stadium in Maryland. Fans in the stands loudly booed when Trump appeared on the Jumbotron late in the first half and again during his halftime introduction by the stadium announcer.

“We’re gonna have a good game. Things are going along very well. The country’s doing well. The Democrats have to open it up,” Trump said, without mentioning the historic government shutdown that has left nearly 42 million Americans relying on food stamps uncertain about how they will access their benefits.The DC area is heavily Democratic, and many locals have been affected by Trump’s federal budget cuts, according to the Guardian.

The jeers came amid reports that Trump wants the Commanders’ new $3.7 billion, 65,000-seat stadium, set to open in 2030, to bear his name.

This follows previous clashes with the franchise over renaming the team to its former Redskins name.

A White House official told ESPN, “It’s what the president wants, and it will probably happen,” while press secretary Karoline Leavitt added via email: “That would be a beautiful name, as it was President Trump who made the rebuilding of the new stadium possible.”

Footage of Trump being booed quickly went viral, triggering reactions on social media. One X user said: “Oh he was rattled, you could barely hear him even over the speakers!” Another said, “This is the worst Trump has ever gotten booed. How embarrassing.”

Others joked, “So I take it they don’t actually want the stadium named after him,” while one wrote, “He was shook,” and another said, “That moment when the smile drops. The boos were LOUD!” A final user commented: “Oh, he’s seething. Good.”

Trump’s appearance marked the first time a sitting president attended a regular-season NFL game in nearly 50 years, with Jimmy Carter being the last in 1978.