California – A commemorative passport meant to mark America’s 250th birthday has turned into the latest political firestorm, and California Sen. Adam Schiff quickly found himself in the middle of it.
The State Department announced this week that it will release a limited run of special “America250” U.S. passports featuring President Donald Trump’s portrait inside the document.
The design places Trump’s image near the Declaration of Independence and includes his signature in gold, according to Reuters report, on the new passport rollout.

Department of State
The passports are tied to the country’s 250th anniversary celebration and are expected to be available through the Washington Passport Agency.
Officials have said the commemorative version will keep the same security features as regular U.S. passports, while using customized artwork for the national milestone.

But the idea did not land quietly.
Almost as soon as images of the passport design began circulating, the announcement sparked a wave of reaction online. Supporters praised it as a patriotic tribute and another bold symbol of Trump’s “America First” brand. Critics, however, saw something very different: the personalization of an official government document around one political figure.
Schiff made his position clear with just three words.
Sharing the State Department’s “sneak peek” post on X, the California Democrat wrote: “Passport to Megalomania.”
https://twitter.com/senadamschiff/status/2049305242391457940
That short jab was enough to set off a flood of replies.
Within hours, Schiff’s comment section filled with users torching the senator over the attack. Many accused him of using the passport announcement as another chance to go after Trump, while others argued that the commemorative design was simply part of a larger national celebration.
Some critics claimed Schiff was being hypocritical. Others brought up his past controversies and suggested that he was in no position to accuse anyone else of ego or self-importance.
What the State Department framed as a limited-edition patriotic keepsake became, for Schiff and his allies, another example of Trump placing himself at the center of American institutions.
For Trump’s supporters, Schiff’s response was seen as predictable.
They argued that the senator would have criticized nearly any Trump-linked project, no matter how it was presented. To them, the passport was not “megalomania” but a commemorative item connected to one of the biggest anniversaries in U.S. history.
The debate also touches a deeper question: how much space should a sitting president occupy in official symbols of the country?
Passports are not campaign posters. They are federal documents carried by Americans around the world. That is why the Trump portrait drew such immediate attention from both sides. For critics, the image crossed a line. For supporters, the outrage was overblown.
Reports say the commemorative passport will be limited in number and connected specifically to the anniversary rollout, not a full replacement of the standard U.S. passport system. ABC News reported that the special version is expected through the Washington Passport Agency, while other routes would continue issuing the standard design.
Still, that did little to calm the reaction online.
“Adam is angry because passport pages aren’t long enough to fit that pencil neck,” one user wrote.
Passport to Prison. pic.twitter.com/c6Z37w3eEE
— 🇺🇸1776-Present🇺🇸 (@American__Sam) April 29, 2026
“You should take a free one-way trip to Gitmo with these other two traitors,” another user added.
“Pathetic, feminine weak “man’ spreading divisiveness. You both proudly serve the AiPAC uniparty. Ban all dual citizens from government and bureaucracy,” another X user said.
“You’ll be surrendering your passport soon. You committed treason in addition to mortgage fraud and other crimes,” @Bubblebathgirl commented.
By the end of the day, the story had become familiar: Trump unveils or is tied to a highly visible national symbol, Democrats call it self-glorifying, and Trump’s supporters rush to defend it while attacking the critics.
This time, Schiff was the target. And for many of the users lighting up his replies, the message was clear: they were not buying his criticism.