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Trump did not post AI image of himself delivering Lady Liberty’s baby version of him

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Claim:

An authentic screenshot of U.S. President Donald Trump’s Truth Social account shows he posted an image generated by artificial intelligence of himself as Jesus delivering a baby Trump from the Statue of Liberty.

Rating:

Context

The image featured a faint watermark for an Instagram user who has published similarly fake content before.

In May 2026, social media users alleged U.S. President Donald Trump posted an AI-generated image of himself — resembling Jesus — delivering a “baby Trump” from the Statue of Liberty. Social media accounts and Snopes readers alike shared the image as an alleged screenshot from Trump’s Truth Social account. 

(Instagram user adam.the.creator)

In reality, Trump did not post the image on any of his social media accounts. We searched through his Truth Social and X accounts, as well as archives of his deleted posts, and found no evidence that he posted or shared such an image. A watermark at the bottom of the image led us to a social media profile called adam.the.creator who previously published similarly fake images on Instagram and Facebook. As such, we rate this alleged Truth Social post as fake.

The image with adam.the.creator‘s watermark was shared by numerous social media accounts. It was uploaded onto adam.the.creator’s Instagram (archived) on April 29. 

The purported creator’s Instagram and Facebook accounts also feature numerous examples of fake, AI-generated images and videos. Snopes has previously covered other fake images created by this individual. The “about” section on his Facebook described it as featuring “Daily memes and fake products from the mind of Adam Padilla.” 

We reached out to Padilla on Instagram to learn more about the origins of the Trump image and will update this post accordingly. 

Google’s reverse image search tool directed us to no authenticated sources, neither social media accounts nor news outlets, covering the alleged post by Trump. Were this claim true, it would have been widely covered by the news media. 

Snopes checked Trump’s Truth, a website that makes it easier to find the president’s Truth Social posts — including deleted ones — and found no evidence of the image. There was also no evidence on Roll Call’s archive of Trump’s social media posts. 

However, Trump did share and delete a similar Truth Social post the previous month, depicting himself as a Christ-like figure. The image, posted April 12, 2026, was AI-generated and depicted him wearing a similar white robe and red sash, garments that appear in many traditional representations of Jesus Christ. As of April 13, the image had been deleted from Trump’s Truth Social feed. He later acknowledged to reporters he posted the image but said he thought it showed him as a doctor rather than Jesus.

Snopes also confirmed in May 2025 that Trump had posted an AI-generated image of himself as the pope

Sources

Dapcevich, Madison. “Was ‘Capitol Invasion’ Lego Set Released Months Ahead of DC Riot?” Snopes, 10 Jan. 2021, https://www.snopes.com//fact-check/capitol-invasion-lego-set/. Accessed 4 May 2026.

“Factbase.” Roll Call, https://rollcall.com/factbase-twitter/. Accessed 4 May 2026.

Rascouët-Paz, Anna. “Did Trump Post, Delete AI Image Depicting Himself in Likeness of Jesus?” Snopes, 13 Apr. 2026, https://www.snopes.com//fact-check/trump-as-jesus-image/.

Rascouët-Paz, Anna. “Yes, Trump Posted an AI Image of Himself as Pope on Truth Social.” Snopes, 5 May 2025, https://www.snopes.com//fact-check/trump-pope-ai-image/.

“Trump’s Truth.” Trump’s Truth, https://trumpstruth.org. Accessed 4 May 2026.
 



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