New York – The public fight between President Donald Trump and House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries of New York has moved far beyond normal political disagreement, turning into a daily collision of social media posts, public insults, policy attacks and threats of prosecution.
What began as another sharp partisan exchange has now become one of Washington’s loudest personal feuds, with Trump and Jeffries repeatedly clashing over the economy, gas prices, grocery bills, redistricting, political violence and the direction of the country.

The tension escalated again Thursday after Trump used Truth Social to accuse Jeffries of “inciting violence,” a claim tied to the Democratic leader’s earlier use of the phrase “maximum warfare” during a fight over congressional maps.
Trump’s post placed Jeffries’ words next to imagery connected to the recent White House Correspondents’ Dinner shooting incident, framing the New York Democrat’s political rhetoric as dangerous.

“This lunatic, Hakeem ‘Low IQ’ Jeffries, should be charged with INCITING VIOLENCE!” Trump wrote.
“The Radical Left Democrats actually want to Destroy our Country.”
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Jeffries did not retreat. Instead, he answered with a video message that mixed sarcasm, anger and campaign-style attack lines, opening with a reference to basketball before turning directly to Trump.
“What’s up, y’all? The Knicks are up 2-0. I’m feeling good,” Jeffries said in a video posted on X by Republicans against Trump account.
“And then I got to wake up this morning and deal with another deranged rant from an out-of-control president threatening to criminally prosecute me. You ain’t intimidating a damn person. We’re going to continue to stay on your case. But what’s wrong with you, bro? Why do I stay on your mind? You ain’t got nothing better to do? Gas prices are surging, grocery bills are out of control, the American people are drowning in your failed economy and you ain’t got nothing better to do but to think about me. Here’s the thing — you need an intervention. Get some help. The American people are suffering because you’re a complete and total failure. And don’t worry about me. Where’s the love?”
House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries fires back at Trump:
“What’s wrong with you bro? Why do I stay on your mind?… You need an intervention. Get some help." pic.twitter.com/JbpnnG1fGx
— Republicans against Trump (@RpsAgainstTrump) May 7, 2026
The response captured the tone of a feud that has become both political and personal.
Jeffries has tried to frame Trump as distracted by revenge while families struggle with rising costs. Trump, meanwhile, has sought to paint Jeffries and other Democrats as reckless figures whose language fuels chaos and division.
Jeffries’ office also pointed to a shorter version of the same message on X, where he wrote: “The Knicks are up 2-0 and I have to wake up to another deranged rant from this guy. Gas prices are sky high, grocery bills are surging and families can’t catch a break. Democrats are about to take back the House and you’re losing your mind. Where’s the luv?”
At the center of Trump’s accusation is Jeffries’ “maximum warfare” remark, which came during a redistricting fight after Democrats moved aggressively on congressional maps in Virginia.
Jeffries later defended the phrase, saying critics could continue attacking him and adding, “I don’t give a damn about the criticism … get lost.” Axios reported that Jeffries also noted the phrase had originally been used by someone described as close to Trump.
The fight is part of a wider pattern.
Trump has repeatedly called for legal action against Democratic opponents, while Democrats have accused him of using the presidency and public platforms to threaten political rivals. Jeffries is only the latest major Democrat to become a target of Trump’s prosecution demands, joining a list of figures the president has publicly attacked in recent months.
Online, the clash has quickly become fuel for both sides.
Supporters of Trump echoed his claims about Democratic rhetoric. Critics of the president accused him of trying to distract from prices, foreign policy pressure and domestic economic anxiety.
Others filled comment sections with memes, jokes, insults and pleas for Washington leaders to focus less on personal fights and more on the problems facing ordinary Americans.
For now, neither man appears ready to lower the temperature.
Trump is using the feud to define Jeffries as a radical Democratic leader. Jeffries is using Trump’s attacks to present himself as unintimidated and eager for a broader fight over control of the House.
As the political season grows sharper, their war of words is no longer a side drama. It has become one of the main stages where the country’s deeper partisan battle is playing out.