Trump taunts O’Donnell over mental health claims
President Donald Trump didn’t hold back when addressing Rosie O’Donnell’s recent claims that his first term wrecked her mental health. His sharp retort? She’s a mess, and it’s a fine thing she’s no longer in the United States.
According to Breitbart News, Trump responded to a reporter’s question about O’Donnell’s comments on Chris Cuomo’s podcast, where she linked her overeating, overdrinking, and depression to his presidency. The exchange highlights a long-standing feud now reignited by her public grievances and his biting comeback.
O’Donnell, speaking with Cuomo, painted a picture of personal collapse during Trump’s initial term, admitting she was overwhelmed by distress. She told Cuomo, “I was very, very depressed,” pinning her struggles on what she called lies about Trump that America bought into.
Podcast Claims Spark Presidential Pushback
Her words on the podcast didn’t just stop at personal pain; they carried a pointed accusation against the media and Trump’s influence. O’Donnell lamented how her heart broke over a business that, in her view, peddled falsehoods for profit.
Trump, when pressed by a reporter, offered no sympathy, instead doubling down with a jab at her current state. “Rosie’s a mess,” he said plainly, suggesting her departure to Ireland was a net positive for the nation.
His reaction wasn’t a one-off quip; it built on earlier sentiments he shared on Truth Social, where he floated the idea of revoking her citizenship. Trump labeled her a “threat to humanity,” urging her to stay in Ireland if they’d have her.
History of Hostility Fuels Latest Clash
This isn’t a fresh spat but a continuation of a bitter rivalry that’s spanned years. Trump’s Truth Social post underscored a deep-seated animosity, with his harsh words aiming to delegitimize her presence in American discourse.
O’Donnell didn’t let that stand unchallenged, firing back on Instagram with a defiant stance. She described herself as everything Trump fears: a loud, queer woman and a truth-telling mother who escaped the country before, in her words, he set it ablaze.
Her Instagram retort, “18 years later and I still live rent-free in that collapsing brain of yours,” dripped with scorn. Yet, while she casts herself as a fearless critic, her framing of personal woes as a direct result of Trump’s presidency raises questions about accountability.
Public Feud or Personal Deflection?
Let’s cut through the noise: O’Donnell’s attempt to tie her mental health battles and lifestyle struggles to Trump’s tenure feels like a stretch. Personal responsibility shouldn’t be outsourced to political figures, no matter how polarizing they are.
Trump’s response, while blunt, sidesteps any pretense of compassion, which some might see as needlessly cold. Still, his point about her self-imposed exit to Ireland lands as a reminder that actions have consequences, even for celebrities seeking sympathy.
The back-and-forth, including his citizenship jab, shows he’s playing to an audience tired of Hollywood’s endless victimhood narratives. Why should a public figure’s personal failings become a national talking point tied to a presidency?
A Tired Saga Dragging On
This feud, entertaining as it may be to some, risks becoming a distraction from more pressing issues facing the country. Both sides seem content to lob verbal grenades rather than engage in anything resembling constructive dialogue.
O’Donnell’s grievances, however genuine, lose impact when framed as a direct attack rather than a broader critique of political culture. Trump, meanwhile, gains little by rehashing old grudges when his focus could be elsewhere.
In the end, this spat serves as a reminder of how personal and political lines blur in today’s hypercharged climate. Perhaps it’s time for both to step back, letting the public focus on policies and problems that actually shape our future.




