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US Representative Al Green says he confronted Trump over Obama video

February 24, 2026 9:23 PM EST

U.S. Rep. Al Green (D-TX) holds a sign as U.S. President Donald Trump delivers the State of the Union address to a joint session of Congress at the U.S. Capitol in Washington, D.C., U.S., February 24, 2026. REUTERS/Evelyn Hockstein

By Suheir Sheikh and ‌Richard Cowan

WASHINGTON, ​Feb 24 (Reuters) - ​Democratic U.S. Representative Al Green said he confronted President Donald Trump at his State of the Union speech ‌over a "deplorable" video on the Republican's social media account ⁠earlier this month that contained a racist depiction of former President Barack Obama ‌and his wife Michelle Obama ‌as apes.

As Trump entered the House chamber, Green, of Texas, unfurled a white sign that read: "Black people aren't apes." The White ​House eventually took down the video and Trump said a staffer had posted it.

"I wanted him to know that portraying ⁠President Obama and First Lady Obama as members of the primate family is not only ​unacceptable, it is something that is deplorable and something we will not tolerate," Green said in an interview ​with Reuters in the Capitol after being ‌ejected from Trump's speech.

Green, who first came to the House in 2005, said he positioned himself inside ⁠the House chamber at a seat on the aisle that Trump would have to walk up on his way to the podium.

It was the ⁠second year in a row Green was ejected from Trump's speech to Congress, ​after having yelled at him during last year's address.

"Judging from the look on his face that he turned away quickly, he was at a moment ‌of vulnerability because he's not confronted by people who are willing to speak truth to him," Green ‌said.

Asked whether he could face additional punishment from the Republican-controlled House, Green ⁠responded that he did ‌not know but "The consequences ​are subservient to what happened."

(Reporting by Suheir Sheikh, Richard Cowan and Bo Erickson; editing by Scott Malone and ‌Deepa Babington)



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Donald J. Trump, Barack Obama