logo
Donald Trump demands NFL's Washington Commanders change name back to Redskins 'immediately'

Donald Trump demands NFL's Washington Commanders change name back to Redskins 'immediately'

Daily Mail​a day ago
Donald Trump is tackling the biggest issue in Washington: The local NFL team's 2020 decision to drop 'Redskins' in favor of a more politically correct nickname.
Known as the Commanders since 2022, Washington's football team dropped the controversial moniker fiver years ago amid uproar over the death of George Floyd at the hands of Minneapolis police.
'The Washington "Whatever's" should IMMEDIATELY change their name back to the Washington Redskins Football Team,' Trump wrote on social media before a scheduled round of golf at Trump National Golf Club in Washington D.C. 'There is a big clamoring for this.'
Daily Mail has reached out to Commanders spokespeople for comment.
While Trump may be slightly off about the team name (they were the 'Washington Redskins' and then the 'Washington Football Team' but never the 'Washington Redskins Football Team'), he is right about uproar over the changes.
Fans and even some Native American groups have voiced support for the team's new ownership group to revert to 'Redskins.' Several public opinion polls of self-identified Native Americans have found most were not offended by the term, while critics have pointed to academic research by the University of Michigan and UC Berkeley that found the opposite was true.
Trump appeared to reference the public polling in favor of a name change on Sunday.
Trump is slightly off about the team names. They were the 'Washington Redskins' and then the 'Washington Football Team' but never the 'Washington Redskins Football Team'
'Our great Indian people, in massive numbers, want this to happen,' he claimed. 'Their heritage and prestige is systematically being taken away from them. Times are different now than they were three or four years ago. We are a Country of passion and common sense. OWNERS, GET IT DONE!!!'
A year ago, the family of the man depicted in the former Redskins logo urged the team to bring his image back to the helmet.
'The fans want him back and we want him back,' Thomas White Calf, a great nephew of late Blackfeet Nation chief John Two Guns White Calf, told Fox News after meeting with Senator Steve Daines (Republican, Montana ).
Thomas' pleas came four years after the team began its rebranding, first becoming the Washington Football Team on a temporary basis before adopting 'Commanders' and dropping the feathered John Two Guns White Calf emblem.
'Our ancestor was the most famous and most photographed native in history,' Thomas told Fox alongside his mother, Delphine White Calf, a niece of the late Blackfeet chief. 'Two Guns was also the face on the Indian head nickel. I'm proud of him. The Blackfeet are proud of him.'
The club began as the Boston Braves in 1932 before changing its name to 'Redskins' a year later and moving to the US Capital in 1937. But it wasn't until 1971 that Blackfeet leader Blackie Wetzel created a portrait of John Two Guns White Calf that ultimately became the team's logo.
The term's origin is disputed, according to a 2016 Washington Post article that claims it was first used as a pejorative as early as 1863 in Minnesota.
'The State reward for dead Indians has been increased to $200 for every red-skin sent to Purgatory,' read an announcement in The Winona Daily Republican. 'This sum is more than the dead bodies of all the Indians east of the Red River are worth.'
By 1898, Webster's Collegiate Dictionary began defining 'redskin' with the phrase 'often contemptuous.'
A 2016 Washington Post poll found that 90 percent of the 504 Native American respondents were 'not bothered' by the team's name. Now-former team owner Daniel Snyder ultimately wrote an open letter, defending his decision to keep the moniker by citing the study.
However, that survey and other similar studies have been slammed by journalists and social scientists as being unreliable.
'The reporters and editors behind this story must have known that it would be used as justification for the continued use of these harmful, racist mascots,' read a statement from the Native American Journalists Association. 'They were either willfully malicious or dangerously naïve in the process and reporting used in this story, and neither is acceptable from any journalistic institution.'
Redskins fan Louis Hilliard, center, has a conversation with Native American protester Jay Winter Nightwolf, left, and Peter Landeros in December of 2017
In March of 2020, UC Berkeley revealed a study that found that more than half of its 1,000 Native American respondents were offended by the team name.
The Supreme Court ruled in 2017 that a trademark law barring disparaging terms infringes on free speech rights. Prior to that, the United States Patent and Trademark office had tried to revoke the Redskins' trademark because it was a racial epithet.
Ultimately it was uproar over Floyd's death in 2020 that led to the change. When the team joined in a social media campaign against racism, many slammed Washington for its continued use of 'Redskins,' leading to the temporary adoption of 'Washington Football Team.'
One twist in the story of the Commanders was their unexpected success with rookie quarterback Jayden Daniels last season. Finishing 12-5, Washington upset the Lions in Detroit en route to the NFC Championship, where they lost to the ultimate Super Bowl winners, the Philadelphia Eagles.
By taking another step in 2025, and potentially winning a Super Bowl as the 'Commanders,' Washington might sideline the debate indefinitely.
Washington D.C. and the NFL's Commanders are set to announce a deal Monday to bring the team back within the city limits after a nearly three-decade run in Landover
NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell and Commanders owner Joshua Harris met Trump at the Oval Office in May to announce plans to bring the league's draft to the National Mall in 2027.
Washington was selected as draft hosts just days after DC mayor Muriel Bowser announced a plan to bring the team back to the city with a new field on the site of the old RFK Stadium, where the team then known as the Redskins played until 1996.
Currently, RFK Stadium stands on the site on the banks of the Anacostia River in the eastern part of the city.
The building has been in the process of a prolonged demolition that has been delayed multiple times. The building was closed back in September 2019, but structural demolition has only begun this year.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Fox News tosses softballs at Karoline Leavitt - right after Press Secretary bans sister outlet Wall Street Journal over Epstein bombshell
Fox News tosses softballs at Karoline Leavitt - right after Press Secretary bans sister outlet Wall Street Journal over Epstein bombshell

The Independent

time3 minutes ago

  • The Independent

Fox News tosses softballs at Karoline Leavitt - right after Press Secretary bans sister outlet Wall Street Journal over Epstein bombshell

Moments after the Wall Street Journal was removed from the White House travel press pool as retribution for the newspaper's bombshell about Donald Trump's alleged birthday letter to Jeffrey Epstein, White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt was greeted on the WSJ's sister network with softball questions about Hunter Biden. As has largely been the case since the president filed his $10 billion lawsuit against the WSJ , its parent company News Corp and its owner Rupert Murdoch over the story, Fox News – which is also owned by Murdoch – once again ignored the White House's vendetta against the right-wing network's 94-year-old founder. Following Trump's concerted effort to dismiss the so-called Epstein files as a Democratic 'hoax' amid a MAGA uproar over his Justice Department concluding Epstein had no 'client list,' the WSJ published a much-anticipated report on Thursday evening detailing the president's once-close relationship with the dead sex offender. The blockbuster story claimed Trump gave Epstein a 'bawdy' card for his 50th birthday that included a hand-drawn sketch of a naked woman with Trump's signature mimicking pubic hair. The report also claimed Trump wrote Epstein a personalized message that concluded: 'Happy Birthday — and may every day be another wonderful secret.' Asserting that the sexually suggestive birthday card is a 'fake thing,' Trump – likely emboldened by CBS owner Paramount settling the 'meritless' 60 Minutes complaint – threatened legal action against the WSJ and his on-again/off-again friend Murdoch before filing a libel lawsuit on Friday afternoon. The defendants 'failed to attach the letter, failed to attach the alleged drawing, failed to show proof that President Trump authored or signed any such letter, and failed to explain how this purported letter was obtained,' the president's lawsuit alleges. 'The reason for those failures is because no authentic letter or drawing exists,' the complaint adds. Fox News – which enjoys a symbiotic relationship with the president and has helped staff his administration – has mostly steered clear of reporting on either the WSJ's scoop or the president's subsequent defamation lawsuit against the network's founder and owner. So far, the WSJ's story has only been mentioned on a handful of Fox News programs – one of which is the Journal Editorial Report, a show co-produced by the WSJ. Fox News media host Howie Kurtz also devoted the opening segment of Sunday morning's MediaBuzz to the lawsuit and the eye-popping report. On Monday afternoon, the White House followed up by removing reporters from the WSJ from the pool of journalists scheduled to cover the president's upcoming four-day trip to Scotland to tour his golf courses. Tarini Parti, a White House reporter for the WSJ, had been initially slated to serve as the print pooler for the final two days of the visit. 'As the appeals court confirmed, the Wall Street Journal or any other news outlet are not guaranteed special access to cover President Trump in the Oval Office, aboard Air Force One, and in his private workspaces,' Leavitt said in a statement. 'Due to the Wall Street Journal's fake and defamatory conduct, they will not be one of the [13] outlets on board. Every news organization in the entire world wishes to cover President Trump, and the White House has taken significant steps to include as many voices as possible.' The latest action by the White House echoes its ban of Associated Press journalists from covering Oval Office events after the wire service said it would not refer to the Gulf of Mexico as the 'Gulf of America' following Trump's executive order renaming the body of water, citing editorial standards. Shortly after Trump took office, Leavitt took control of pool rotation assignments from the White House Correspondents' Association. Appearing on Fox News' The Story moments after confirming that she had booted the WSJ from the travel pool, Leavitt didn't have to worry about being pressed by anchor Martha MacCallum to explain the latest move against the network's sister publication. Despite the Trump administration going on the 'warpath' against Murdoch, MacCallum instead conducted a friendly and non-adversarial chat with the White House flack over the five-minute segment. After devoting the first part of the conversation to the recent shooting of an off-duty Customs and Border Protection officer in New York City, which featured Leavitt blaming the incident on the former Biden administration, MacCallum then brought up New York mayoral candidate Zohran Mamdani. 'You know, Karoline, we have not heard from Mamdani – who is running for mayor in New York,' the anchor stated, wondering if Trump would endorse another candidate in the race because 'he's a New Yorker and he wants to keep the city safe.' Leavitt, meanwhile, took the opportunity to accuse Mamdani – who has quickly become a leftist boogeyman for the right – of standing for 'allowing illegal criminals and criminals of all kinds to run free.' MacCallum, meanwhile, took the opportunity to get Leavitt's 'quick reaction' to something that is 'getting a lot of attention.' But rather than the continued fallout over the Epstein saga, the president's lawsuit and the White House's continued retribution against the WSJ, MacCallum instead wanted Leavitt to respond to Hunter Biden profanely blasting Democrats in a recent podcast appearance. 'Clearly, they've learned nothing from President Trump's overwhelming victory on November 5th,' Leavitt responded, leaning heavily on her tried-and-true talking points. 'The American people want deportations. They want secure borders. That's why we had the most successful six months of any administration!' Adding that it was clear the younger Biden 'wanted to tear down anybody' who veers to the middle on immigration, MacCallum thanked Leavitt for her time before letting viewers know that she would be covering more about Hunter Biden's recent comments later in the program. It would appear the message is clear to Trump world – Fox News isn't going to defend their colleagues at the WSJ or even stand up for their boss right now. Instead, they will just avoid this entire story while focusing energy on the distractions the president prefers they cover – such as Tulsi Gabbard's reigniting MAGA's long-standing obsession with jailing Barack Obama over the Trump-Russia probe, which the administration served up to Fox as an exclusive. In the end, Trump-boosting Fox News host Mark Levin perhaps said it best this past weekend. 'We can't waste our time on Epstein, and other stuff that are going on here that some people want us to focus on,' Levin exclaimed.

Trump calls on two NFL teams to change their names
Trump calls on two NFL teams to change their names

The Independent

time3 minutes ago

  • The Independent

Trump calls on two NFL teams to change their names

Notifications can be managed in browser preferences. Graig Graziosi Monday 21 July 2025 23:18 BST Washington Redskins confirm name change Donald Trump is threatening to block a new stadium deal for the Washington Commanders in Washington, D.C., unless the team changes its name back to the 'Redskins'. Trump also called for the Cleveland Guardians to revert to their previous name, the 'Indians', claiming 'our great Indian people' desire these changes. The Washington team changed its name from 'Redskins' in 2020 due to pressure over the use of a racial slur against Native Americans, while the Cleveland team became the 'Guardians' in 2021 for similar reasons. A 2020 poll found that half of Native American respondents were offended by the name 'Redskins', and a majority found related actions like the 'tomahawk chop' offensive. Despite Trump's demands, both the Commanders and Guardians have indicated no intention of reverting to their previous names, with the Commanders' owner stating they are 'moving forward with the Commanders name'. In full

Trump's 'Swamp Barbie' Brooke Rollins gets her hands dirty with jaw-dropping python capture
Trump's 'Swamp Barbie' Brooke Rollins gets her hands dirty with jaw-dropping python capture

Daily Mail​

time3 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

Trump's 'Swamp Barbie' Brooke Rollins gets her hands dirty with jaw-dropping python capture

President Trump's cabinet members have looked to catch internet virality in the last few months, getting out of DC and into the field and in some cases, the marshlands. Secretary Pete Hegseth and Vice President JD Vance have both worked out with members of the military, and Secretary Noem has ridden along on ICE raids. The latest addition to the administration seeking social media infamy is Agriculture Secretary Brooke Rollins, who shared a stunning photo Monday morning of her participation in a python hunt in the Florida Everglades. 'LOOK WHAT YOU MADE ME DO!' Rollins wrote quoting billionaire pop star Taylor Swift 's song of the same name, posted with a snake emoji. Rollins, 53, posted the set of pics from the Sunshine State from the hunt, which reportedly took place Sunday night. 'Last night I joined a python hunt in the Florida Everglades! Got hands-on with Florida's invasive species problem. Learned how to wrangle those slithery giants like a pro, joined a heart-pounding hunt under the swamp's moonlight, & saw up close how these pythons disrupt the ecosystem,' Rollins added in her post. 'Who's ready to join the hunt?, she also asked her followers, prompting them to engage with the post. X users obliged with comments and the response was decidedly mixed. One user who posts on X under the handle @starrygirl737 wrote, 'This sounds like an awesome experience!' Another user, @cFishFL, who appears to be a native Floridian wrote, 'Let us hunt year round for pythons in Everglades National Park!' Yet, another X user @galexy70 responded less favorably to the secretary, commenting 'Yay! More cosplay!' Rollins served as chief for domestic policy during Trump's first administration and was among the names mentioned in the running for chief of staff. Instead, she was confirmed overwhelmingly by the Senate to lead the Department of Agriculture in a 72-28 vote in February. Rollins is a conservative legal activist and public policy analyst who most recently served as president and CEO of the America First Policy Institute, a Trump-aligned think tank that developed policy and cultivated a network of personnel for the second Trump administration. By Monday afternoon, Rollins was back to posting more conventional political fare on her feed, announcing an allocation of $675 million in agricultural hurricane relief in Felda, Florida and touting the state's influential sugarcane industry.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store