Video of Donald Trump Being Booed at NFL Game Goes Viral Again
LANDOVER, Md. — A video showing President Donald Trump being booed during a National Football League game in November 2025 is resurfacing online, drawing renewed attention amid ongoing political debate.
The footage dates back to Nov. 9, 2025, when Trump attended the Washington Commanders’ regular-season game against the Detroit Lions at Northwest Stadium in Landover, Maryland. The appearance marked the first time a sitting U.S. president attended a regular-season NFL game since President Jimmy Carter in 1978, according to contemporaneous news reports.
Videos from the game show Trump appearing on the stadium’s video boards late in the first half, prompting a loud and mixed reaction from the crowd, with boos dominating over scattered cheers. The reaction intensified during a halftime ceremony when Trump participated in a “Salute to Service” event, administering the Oath of Enlistment to military recruits.
Multiple recordings captured Trump appearing to pause or adjust his delivery as crowd noise continued, though accounts at the time described reactions as varied across different sections of the stadium.
Following the game, Trump shared separate clips on social media highlighting positive moments, including footage of a player performing a celebratory dance associated with Trump, seemingly downplaying the negative reception.
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The video has gained new traction in January 2026, circulating widely on social media platforms, particularly X, where users are reposting the clip in broader political discussions. While the original event occurred months earlier, users are now framing it as a symbol of public dissatisfaction, linking it to current debates over the administration’s immigration policies.
No new official statements from the White House or the NFL have accompanied the video’s resurgence. Fact-checkers have also debunked satirical claims circulating online that Trump ordered law enforcement action against fans who booed, confirming those assertions were meant as jokes.
The renewed attention underscores how past public moments involving political figures can re-enter the spotlight during periods of heightened political tension, even when no new developments have occurred.
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