Social Media Erupts After People See What’s On Trump’s iPhone Lock Screen
President Donald Trump has once again triggered the left — and this time, it wasn’t even a tweet. It was a photo. Of his iPhone lock screen.
A newly surfaced image, snapped as Trump stepped off Air Force One in Pittsburgh, shows the president’s phone screen clearly displaying… a picture of himself. The shot, taken back in July 2019 by Getty photographer Chip Somodevilla, features Trump pointing confidently forward — a fitting image for a man leading a historic political movement.
But of course, leftists couldn’t resist the urge to spiral.
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View Plans“Trump’s lock screen was spotted on his phone last night—and it was a photo of himself. Is that not one of the most narcissistic, self-absorbed things you’ve ever seen???” whined Democrat influencer Harry Sisson. “Not his family, not his kids, but himself. Wtf.”
Cue the outrage.
Meanwhile, conservatives online had a different reaction entirely. Podcaster Benny Johnson simply posted the image with a fire emoji:
“President Trump’s lock screen 🔥”
Another supporter wrote:
“Based! Even his lock screen has aura.”
ahahahahaha
— LoLNothingMatters (@DastDn) June 1, 2025
The most on-brand thing that ever on-branded. Trump's lock screen is, of course, a picture of Trump. pic.twitter.com/IXwRg3eaq9
The photo comes just days before the White House unveiled a powerful new official presidential portrait of Trump — a commanding close-up of the 45th and 47th president staring directly ahead, replacing the softer earlier version that critics had likened to his now-iconic mugshot.
While media fixated on Trump’s iPhone wallpaper, the White House was busy doing something Democrats couldn’t meme away: protecting the American people.
On Wednesday night, President Trump signed Executive Order 14161, a sweeping national security directive that restricts travel from nearly 20 countries identified as high-risk for terrorism, visa fraud, or failure to share critical vetting information with U.S. authorities.
Twelve nations — including Afghanistan, Iran, Somalia, Libya, and Yemen — are now under full travel bans. Seven others, including Cuba, Venezuela, and Laos, face partial restrictions, according to Fox News.
“President Trump is fulfilling his promise to protect Americans from dangerous foreign actors that want to come to our country and cause us harm,” Deputy Press Secretary Abigail Jackson said in a statement.
The move comes in the wake of a deadly terror incident in Boulder, Colorado, involving a visa overstayer. In a video statement, Trump didn’t mince words:
“Thanks to Biden’s open-door policies, today there are millions and millions of these illegals who should not be in our country.”
“We don’t want them.”
Democrats were quick to recycle the same tired attacks. Rep. Ilhan Omar (D-MN), who infamously objected to Trump’s original 2017 travel order, called the move “racist” and “discriminatory.”
But Americans aren’t buying the hysteria this time. The difference between Trump’s decisive leadership and the chaos of Biden’s borders couldn’t be clearer.
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View PlansSo yes — Trump’s lock screen is a picture of Trump. Is it self-assured? Sure. Is it a sign of narcissism? Hardly. It’s a symbol of strength, confidence, and the unapologetic pride of a president who refuses to back down — not to CNN, not to Biden, and certainly not to the radical left.
As one supporter put it:
“When you’re making history, it’s OK to take a picture of it.”