The Trump White House isn’t afraid to fight back. They know how to hit the Democrats where it hurts.
And a radical Leftist congresswoman is completely humiliated over this White House attack.
It looks like the White House is sending a clear message to Rep. Ilhan Omar, D-Minn., suggesting it’s time for her to pack up and head back to Somalia, her birthplace.
On Monday, they fired off a post on X featuring President Donald Trump waving farewell from a McDonald’s drive-thru window back in 2024. This came right after a video surfaced of Omar brushing off any fears about deportation.
https://t.co/LczqxFazRq pic.twitter.com/pPeGmnLOFC
— The White House (@WhiteHouse) November 10, 2025
In that clip from The Dean Obeidallah Show in October, Omar sounded downright nonchalant. “I have no worry, I don’t know how they’d take away my citizenship and like deport me,” she declared.
She went on to add, “But I don’t even know like why that’s such a scary threat. Like I’m not the 8-year-old who escaped war anymore. I’m grown, my kids are grown. Like I could go live wherever I want.”
The White House’s jab didn’t come out of nowhere. It tapped into that iconic moment from Trump’s 2024 campaign stop in Pennsylvania, where he manned the fry station at a McDonald’s, showing his everyman appeal. Now, that image is being repurposed to wave off Omar, who seems all too eager to downplay her ties to America.
Omar’s office stayed silent when Fox News Digital reached out for a comment, and the White House didn’t chime in either. But actions speak louder than words, and this post has patriots cheering. It’s a reminder that some folks in Congress might not appreciate the opportunities this country handed them.
Born in Somalia, Omar and her family fled the chaos of the Somalian Civil War in 1991, landing in a refugee camp in Kenya. The U.S. stepped up, granting them asylum, and they arrived in Arlington, Virginia, in 1995 before settling in Minneapolis two years later. She became a citizen in 2000, but recent events make you wonder if that gratitude ever stuck.
President Trump hasn’t denied his feelings about Omar lately. Just on November 1, he posted on Truth Social, blasting a video of her speaking Somali with a straightforward demand: “She should go back!” It’s classic Trump—direct, unapologetic, and putting America first.
Trump doubled down in September, sharing a supposed chat with Somalia’s leader. “You know, I met the head of Somalia, did you know that?” he told reporters. “And I suggested that maybe he’d like to take her back. He said, ‘I don’t want her.’”
Omar fired back, calling the whole thing a tall tale and questioning Trump’s honesty. “From denying Somalia had a president to making up a story, President Trump is a lying buffoon,” she snapped. Then she added, “No one should take this embarrassing fool seriously.”
This feud isn’t new; it dates back to Trump’s first term. He took aim at Omar and her fellow “Squad” members, those progressive firebrands, telling them to head back to their “broken and crime infested” countries.
Omar clapped back on social media in 2019, accusing Trump of fanning the flames of division. She posted that he was “stoking white nationalism bc you are angry that people like us are serving in Congress and fighting against your hate-filled agenda.”
Fast forward to today, and the tension hasn’t cooled. Omar’s rise in politics started in Minnesota’s House of Representatives, where she served for two years before winning a seat in the U.S. House in 2018. She made history as the first Somali-American woman and one of the first Muslim women in Congress.
But history aside, many Americans see her as a symbol of what’s gone wrong with immigration policies—letting in folks who then criticize the very nation that gave them a second chance. Trump’s latest moves are resonating with voters who want leaders loyal to the Stars and Stripes.
The White House’s McDonald’s meme isn’t just a laugh; it’s a pointed critique of Omar’s attitude. She acts like deportation is no big deal, as if America’s citizenship is just a convenience she can toss aside.
Patriots across the country are nodding along, tired of hearing anti-American rhetoric from elected officials. If Omar’s so confident about living anywhere, maybe it’s time to test that theory and let her try Somalia on for size.
In the end, this exchange highlights the divide in Washington: Trump fighting for everyday Americans, while figures like Omar push agendas that seem out of touch with the heartland. The wave goodbye might just be the start of a bigger pushback.
