"Make America Great Again" has been the subject of many parodies, jokes, instances of praise, references, and criticisms which base themselves on the four-word slogan.
Derivatives used by Trump "Keep America Great" has been the most popular derivative of "Make America Great Again", with
Trump's 2020 presidential campaign adopting it as the official slogan, though often used alongside "Make America Great Again". Upon Trump announcing his candidacy for president in the
2024 election, commentators described his use of the tagline "Make America Great and Glorious Again" ("MAGAGA"). The term has come to be a humorous descriptor for Trump's re-election bid, and many outlets have commented on the humor that "MAGAGA" provides, usually on the word "gag" being part of the acronym. At the
2024 Republican National Convention, some people wore clothing with the slogan "Make American Great Again Again". In October 2024, Trump promised former third-party candidate
Robert F. Kennedy Jr. control of public health using the phrase "
Make America Healthy Again". In November 2024, after Governor
Gavin Newsom pledged to convene California lawmakers to secure California's progressive policies against the incoming
Trump administration, Trump made "Make California Great Again" go viral on social media. During a joint press conference with Philippine president
Bongbong Marcos at the White House in July 2025, Trump voiced support for the Philippines'
independent foreign policy and said, "I think he (Marcos) has to do what's right for his country. I've always said, you know, make the Philippines great again. Do whatever you need to do." In January 2026, Trump said of Venezuelan vice president
Delcy Rodríguez, "She's essentially willing to do what we think is necessary to make Venezuela great again." Rodríguez became acting president after the Trump administration
captured Venezuelan president
Nicolás Maduro and his wife and took them into custody in New York.
Anti-Trump derivatives, parodies, and other derivatives " hats during the
2017 Women's March. The phrase has been parodied in political statements, such as "Make America Mexico Again", a critique of
Trump's immigration policies regarding the
US–Mexico border and a reference to Mexico's loss of 55% of its territory to the US with the
Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo. Adult film star
Stormy Daniels, who
allegedly had an affair with President Trump, took part in a "Make America Horny Again" strip club tour. The tour followed Trump's initial 2016 campaign trail and part of the revenue was donated to
Planned Parenthood.
John Oliver spoofed the slogan on his show
Last Week Tonight with John Oliver in a
segment dedicated to Trump, urging viewers to "Make Donald
Drumpf Again", in reference to the original ancestral name of the
Trump family. The segment broke
HBO viewership records, garnering 85 million views. Later in the year, comedian
Jimmy Kimmel repeated the phrase to suggest limiting presidential power. A 2018 essay about the Barack Obama
birtherism conspiracy in the
Journal of Hate Studies by two professors at
Bates College was titled "Make America Hate Again: Donald Trump and the Birther Conspiracy". The phrase has been adopted by some
environmentalists. In June 2017, French president
Emmanuel Macron rebuked Trump over
withdrawing from the Paris Agreement. The last sentence of the speech he delivered was "make our planet great again". Members of the
Fridays for Future Movement have also frequently used slogans like "Make Earth Greta Again", referring to environmental activist
Greta Thunberg. In 2019, Grant Armour and
Milene Larsson co-directed a documentary film named
Make the World Greta Again. After
Joe Biden defeated Trump in the
2020 presidential election, Biden's wife
Jill posted an image of her and her husband on
Instagram which featured Joe wearing a blue cap with white text reading "We Just Did", meant as a response to Trump's "Make America Great Again" slogan. In late 2022, the political slogan "
MAGA Communism" trended on
Twitter after being
tweeted out by former
San Clemente city council candidate
Jackson Hinkle. MAGA Communism adherents call on those who support the American
working class to ally with members of the
MAGA movement. The term "
Blue MAGA" is used to criticize a cult-like dedication to Biden as a person, the
Democratic Party's use of conspiracy theories to explain opposition to Biden's
2024 presidential candidacy, and dismissals of information or polling that does not reflect well on Biden; the term seeks to suggest an equivalence between some supporters of Biden and Trump. In early 2025, the Brazilian government's secretary of communication
Sidônio Palmeira created the slogan "Brazil belongs to Brazilians" ("")—printed on blue caps—at the request of then-on-leave secretary of institutional affairs
Alexandre Padilha, with the aim of countering the "Make America Great Again" caps. Brazil's president
Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva also posted a video on social media wearing the cap, in what has sometimes been referred to as the "battle of the caps" or "cap war". Padilha stated he was distressed to see people "saluting another country", in reference to former president
Jair Bolsonaro; In August, during the second ministerial meeting of the year, Lula da Silva and
his ministers wore the cap in question; the president and all 38 ministers posed for identification-style photographs on the occasion.
Use of the slogan by Trump's political rivals After Donald Trump popularized the use of the phrase, the phrase and
modifications of it were widely used in reference both to his election campaign and to his politics. Trump's primary opponents,
Ted Cruz and
Scott Walker, began using "Make America Great Again" in speeches, inciting Trump to send
cease-and-desist letters to them. Cruz later sold hats featuring "Make Trump Debate Again" in response to Trump's boycotting the
Iowa January 28, 2016, debate. New York governor
Andrew Cuomo said America "was never that great" during a September 2018 bill signing. Former United States attorney general
Eric Holder questioned the slogan in a March 2019 interview on
MSNBC, asking: "Exactly when did you think America was great?" During
John McCain's memorial service on September 1, 2018, his daughter
Meghan stated: "The America of John McCain has no need to be made great again because America was always great." Trump subsequently tweeted "MAKE AMERICA GREAT AGAIN!" later that day. Throughout Donald Trump's presidencies, the phrase "Is America great yet?" has been used both facetiously and as an actual poll question. During remarks at the White House on May 4, 2022, President
Joe Biden referred to former president Trump's
Make America Great Again movement, saying, "This MAGA crowd is really the most extreme political organization that's existed in American history, in recent American history." On September 1, 2022, he dedicated remarks at the White House "on the continued battle for the soul of the nation", to attacks on "Donald Trump and the MAGA Republicans", saying that "Donald Trump and the MAGA Republicans represent an extremism that threatens the very foundations of our republic", and that "MAGA Republicans have made their choice. They embrace anger. They thrive on chaos. They live not in the light of truth but in the shadow of lies." After Florida governor
Ron DeSantis announced his run for the
2024 Republican Party presidential primary, several news outlets said he promised to "Make America Florida". One of the most widespread anti-Trump derivatives of "Make America Great Again" during the Trump presidency and the 2020 election was "Make America Think Again", often combined with 2020 Democratic primary candidate
Andrew Yang's preferred version of "Make America Think Harder" ("MATH"). The slogan has been spotted at numerous anti-Trump events from Democratic political rallies to marches to social media, with
Live Science noting "Think Again" as one of its top hashtags for 2017.
"Make America White Again" Australian political commentator and former
Liberal Party leader
John Hewson used the satirical slogan "Make America
White Again" in reference to his belief that recent global movements against traditional politics and politicians are based on racism and prejudice. He comments: "There should be little doubt about U.S. president
Donald Trump's views on race, despite his occasional 'denials', assertions of 'fake news', and/or his semantic distinctions. His election campaign theme was effectively a promise to 'Make America Great Again; America First and Only' and—
nod, nod, wink, wink—to Make America White Again." In a bid for attention, a few fringe
racist political activists have associated "Make America Great Again" with a return to whiteness.
In popular culture "Make America Great Again" has frequently been parodied in advertising, the media, and other outlets of popular culture, with varying levels of comparison to Trump from none at all to a rebuke of the former president and
his ideology.
In advertising The slogan was parodied by
Dunk-a-roos as "Make America Dunk Again", and also in the film
Sharknado 5: Global Swarming's tagline of "Make America Bait Again."
In artwork Make Everything Great Again was a
street art mural by artist Mindaugas Bonanu in
Vilnius, Lithuania. Inspired by the graffiti painting
My God, Help Me to Survive This Deadly Love, it depicts
Donald Trump giving a fraternal kiss to the Russian president
Vladimir Putin.
In fashion Fashion designer
Andre Soriano used the "Make America Great Again" official presidential campaign flag to design a MAGA gown for celebrities in Hollywood to wear on red carpet, such as at the
2017 Grammy Awards.
In films and web series The tagline for the film
The Purge: Election Year (2016) is "Keep America Great" (a phrase Trump would later use as his 2020 campaign slogan); one of the TV spots for the film featured Americans who explain why they support the Purge, with one stating he does so "to keep my country [America] great". The next film in the franchise,
The First Purge, was subsequently advertised with a poster featuring its title stylized on a MAGA hat. In
The Boys Season 4, the political slogan "Make America Super Again" serves as the main rallying cry for
Homelander, the primary antagonist, as he successfully executes his own version of
January 6 coup attempt in the universe of
The Boys franchise.
In literature Author
Octavia E. Butler used "Make America Great Again" as the presidential campaign slogan for the dictator Andrew Steele Jarret in her 1998 dystopian novel
Parable of the Talents. In 2011, Republican former
United States Senate candidate
Christine O'Donnell published a book about her campaign in the
2010 Delaware special election titled ''Troublemaker: Let's Do What It Takes to Make America Great Again''. Political advisor
Dan Pfeiffer's second book is called
Un-Trumping America: A Plan to Make America a Democracy Again. Political commentator and author
Peter Beinart published a 2006 book titled
The Good Fight: Why Liberalsand Only LiberalsCan Win the War on Terror and Make America Great Again, drawing on the philosophy of theologian
Reinhold Niebuhr after the
2003 invasion of Iraq and during the early years of the
war on terror.
In music Snoop Dogg's second EP is called
Make America Crip Again with the second single titled "M.A.C.A." Dogg was quoted in
Rolling Stone as saying that "Make America Great Again" refers to a time in the past that "always takes me back to separation and
segregation so I'd rather Make America
Crip Again" and referred to a time "when young black men in impoverished areas organized to help their communities and to take care of their own because society basically left them for dead". Singer
Joy Villa produced a single "Make America Great Again" a few months after appearing at the 2017 Grammy Awards in a 'MAGA' dress. Australian heavy metal band
Thy Art Is Murder recorded a song called "Make America Hate Again" on their album
Human Target.
On television The
Star Trek: Discovery episode "
What's Past Is Prologue" has
Gabriel Lorca vowing in one scene to "Make
the Empire glorious again". In the
South Park episode "
Where My Country Gone?" (2015), supporters of
Mr. Garrison, who runs a campaign that is a parody of Trump's, are seen holding signs bearing the slogan.
In video games Senator Armstrong, the antagonist of the 2013 video game
Metal Gear Rising: Revengeance uses the phrase "make America great again".
Wolfenstein II: The New Colossus, a first-person shooter video game with
Nazis as the enemy, was given the advertising
tagline "Make America Nazi-Free Again", which some people objected to as anti-Trump, though a company executive said the game was not a "social critique on 2017 America." Peters Hines, the studio's vice president of marketing and public relations, was quoted on
GamesIndustry.biz as saying, "
Wolfenstein has been a decidedly anti-Nazi series since the first release more than 20 years ago. We aren't going to shy away from what the game is about. We don't feel it's a reach for us to say Nazis are bad and un-American, and we're not worried about being on the right side of history here."
Similar slogans used outside the United States During
his campaign for the
2019 Indonesian presidential election in October 2018, former opposition leader
Prabowo Subianto used the phrase "make Indonesia great again", though he denied having copied Trump. During the
Swedish European Parliament election in May 2019, the
Christian Democrats party used the slogan "Make EU
Lagom Again". The Spanish far-right party
Vox used "" (Make Spain Great Again) as a slogan. During the
2020 Trinidad and Tobago general election campaign, the
Leader of the Opposition and former prime minister
Kamla Persad-Bissessar, who has been accused as attempting to be a "wannabe Trinidad and Tobago Trump," used the phrase "Make T&T (Trinidad and Tobago) great again!" Following Donald Trump's victory in the
2024 United States presidential election, she described his win as an effort to "restore conservative American values and ideals, which have been under attack by promoters of extreme far-left ideology." In Singapore, the slogan "Make
Yishun Great Again" was used by content creators as a running joke where the town itself has a stereotype for being dangerous. There were hats sold with the phrase. Similarly,
People's Power Party, a political party in Singapore, used a variant of the slogan, "Make Singapore Home Again" for their party's manifesto and campaign during the
2025 Singaporean general election. The right-wing populist
United Australia Party used the slogans "Make Australia Great" and "Make Australia Great Again" during the
2019 and
2022 Australian federal elections.
Coalition senator
Jacinta Nampijinpa Price used the phrase "make Australia great again" during the
2025 federal election campaign. At a later press conference, she said she hadn't "even realise[d]" she said the phrase and accused media outlets of being "obsessed with Donald Trump". In Israel, the
Israeli far-right has used the similar expression "Make Israel Great Again" along with the acronym MIGA. In Mongolia,
Khaltmaagiin Battulga used as his
2017 presidential election campaign slogan "" (, "Mongolia Will Win"), with its abbreviation "" () being a derivative term. The
2024 Hungarian Presidency of the Council of the European Union used the motto "Make Europe Great Again" (MEGA). In the Philippines,
Isko Moreno used the slogan "Make Manila Great Again" for his mayoral campaign during the
2025 Manila local elections. During the
2023 presidential campaign of
Javier Milei in Argentina,
his party adopted the slogan MAGA as "Make Argentina Great Again". Milei, who is a personal friend and an admirer of Trump, won the election in November 2023. In February 2025, Indian prime minister
Narendra Modi used the derivative "Make India Great Again" during a bilateral meeting with Trump, saying: "Borrowing an expression from the US, our vision for a developed India is to 'Make India Great Again', or MIGA. When America and India work together, when it's MAGA plus MIGA, it becomes mega – a mega partnership for prosperity." An April 2025 article by
The Economist which introduced the impact of
the second Trump administration tariffs in China was entitled "How America could end up making China great again". In Syria, a billboard was seen in Damascus during the visit of U.S. Republican congressman
Cory Mills, displaying the phrase "Make Syria Great Again." In an interview with the
Jewish Journal on May 28, 2025, Syrian president
Ahmed al-Sharaa said he accepted the role to help rebuild Syria, stating, "We have no choice but to succeed", and used the phrase "We must make Syria great again".
Make Iran Great Again The slogan "
Make Iran Great Again" has been used by the Iranian opposition group
Restart since at least 2020. In 2025 U.S. president Donald Trump also made use of the slogan to advocate for the replacement of the
Islamic regime ruling Iran. == See also ==