Donald Trump, the 45th President of the United States and a figure whose political identity is intrinsically linked to his contentious relationship with the press, has recently intensified his verbal assaults, focusing a significant portion of his ire on female reporters. While his decades-long criticism of the media has been well-documented, the noticeable and sustained escalation in gendered attacks over the past few months has ignited fresh debates surrounding misogyny, press freedom, and the boundaries of presidential decorum. Historically, the public insulting of a journalist by a sitting U.S. President would have constituted a national scandal. Yet, through his tenure and continued post-presidency activities, such behavior has become increasingly normalized. The President’s confrontational style, defined by his popularization of the term “fake news,” has, critics argue, deeply undermined public trust in journalism. However, the latest pattern of targeting women in the press corps represents a concerning shift in the tenor of his rhetoric.
The Recent Surge: From ‘Piggy’ to ‘Nasty’
The intensity of these public attacks peaked in November. The month began with widespread outrage after the President, apparently agitated by a line of questioning, told Bloomberg White House correspondent Catherine Lucey, “quiet, piggy” during a press encounter aboard Air Force One. The journalist’s question reportedly related to the recent release of Jeffrey Epstein files, a topic Trump clearly wished to avoid. The remark drew swift and widespread condemnation from media watchdogs and civil rights groups.
The attacks did not stop there. Shortly afterward, Trump launched a series of insults at another reporter, calling her “nasty” and “stupid.” Furthermore, a review of his social media activity over the Thanksgiving week showed a pattern of using discriminatory language against political rivals and public figures, including referring to Minnesota Governor Tim Walz using an ableist slur and directing an Islamophobic remark at Representative Ilhan Omar, whom he described as “the worst ‘Congressman/woman’ in our Country… always wrapped in her swaddling hijab.”
The Kaitlan Collins Incident and the Question of Context
Perhaps the most widely scrutinized recent incident involved CNN’s Chief White House Correspondent, Kaitlan Collins. During a press conference, Collins questioned the President about his threats and actions concerning Venezuela. Rather than respond directly to the substance of her question, the President snapped at Collins, asking: “Are you stupid? Are you a stupid person?”
He later doubled down on his Truth Social platform, where he further criticized Collins—misspelling her name as “Caitlin Collin’s”—and calling her “always Stupid and Nasty.” In the same post, he shifted the subject to a defense of his White House ballroom renovations, which he claimed were “fully paid for by private donations” and “under budget and ahead of schedule.”
CNN swiftly rose to their journalist’s defense, asserting Collins as an “exceptional journalist” whom audiences “know they can trust.” Collins herself posted a measured, six-word correction on Instagram, pushing back on the President’s narrative: “Technically my question was about Venezuela.”
Gender and the White House Defense
While the President’s attacks have disproportionately focused on female reporters in recent weeks—a pattern that has included insulting veteran New York Times journalist Katie Rogers by calling her “ugly, both inside and out”—the White House maintains that the comments are not gendered.
White House Spokeswoman Abigail Jackson stated: “President Trump has never been politically correct, never holds back, and in large part, the American people re-elected him for his transparency. This has nothing to do with gender – it has everything to do with the fact that the President’s and the public’s trust in the media is at all-time lows.”
Critics, however, argue that dismissing the gendered aspect ignores a well-documented issue: research consistently indicates that women in media face a disproportionate level of harassment, including sexist remarks and threats, compared with their male counterparts. This trend has profound implications for press freedom, safety, and the quality of public discourse.
Broader Implications and Journalistic Resilience
This stark departure from historical norms—where presidential criticism of the press was infrequent and rarely personal—underscores the evolving nature of political communication in the age of social media. Platforms like Truth Social offer the President direct, unfiltered communication, bypassing traditional journalistic scrutiny but simultaneously amplifying insults and rhetoric.
Organizations like the Committee to Protect Journalists have expressed serious concern that such public disparagement from a world leader can intimidate reporters and potentially chill investigative reporting. Despite these challenges, journalists like Kaitlan Collins exemplify professionalism and resilience in the face of hostility. News organizations continue to defend their reporters and uphold journalistic standards, emphasizing that personal attacks will not deter their commitment to objective reporting.
In a climate where insults have become normalized, the tenacity of journalists and the scrutiny of the public remain vital. Donald Trump’s combative engagement with the media, particularly female reporters, continues to be a defining—and controversial—feature of his political persona, prompting ongoing debate about the intersection of power, gender, and press freedom in the 21st century.