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what did snoop dogg say about trump

Snoop Dogg has said very different things about Donald Trump over the years, ranging from harsh insults and “F‑Trump” rants to more recent comments saying he has “nothing but love and respect” for him after Trump helped pardon someone close to Snoop.

Early feud: harsh criticism

In the Trump presidency era, Snoop was one of the loudest celebrity critics.

  • He released music and videos clearly aimed at Trump, including a video where a Trump-like clown character gets a gun pointed at him, meant as political satire.
  • In interviews back then, he went off on Trump’s policies, calling out the attempted “Muslim ban,” police violence, and people serving long sentences for marijuana while Trump was in power.
  • In a profanity-filled rant reacting to Trump’s comments about NFL player Marshawn Lynch, Snoop said “F‑ Donald Trump” (using much stronger language) and added “F‑ you, Trump, and everything you stand for,” saying people should be ashamed to call him their president.
  • He also said he couldn’t stand seeing Trump in office and that anyone voting for Trump was “stupid,” making it clear he wanted him out in the 2020 election.

An example of the tone back then was basically: “Forget Trump, forget everything he stands for,” with Snoop insisting Trump wasn’t his president.

Later shift: “nothing but love and respect”

Things changed after Trump commuted the sentence of Michael “Harry-O” Harris, a cofounder of Death Row Records whom Snoop had long supported.

  • In a 2024 interview with The Sunday Times, Snoop said: “Donald Trump? He hasn’t done anything wrong to me. He has only done good things for me. He pardoned Michael Harris.”
  • He summed it up by saying he had “nothing but love and respect for Donald Trump,” which was a huge shift from the earlier “F‑Trump” era.

So in short, Snoop went from loudly attacking Trump’s presidency and calling him out as divisive, to later saying Trump had only done positive things for him personally because of that pardon.

2025 backlash: performing at Trump’s inauguration event

After Trump’s return to the White House, Snoop performed at a Trump inaugural ball–related event and got a ton of backlash online and in the press.

  • Critics pointed out how strongly he had denounced Trump in the past, saying the performance made him look like a sellout.
  • Snoop responded that people were too quick to tear each other down, arguing his actions as a person should matter more than where he performs or who he DJs for.
  • Commentators countered that Trump’s policies hurt people of color and marginalized groups, saying Snoop was ignoring the bigger picture.

One columnist described it as Snoop “flipping” on Trump, saying it showed he put himself before his community, which is why the backlash was so intense.

What people are saying online now

Recent forum and social chatter mostly revolves around that flip and the inauguration performance.

  • Many users say Snoop “sold out,” quoting his old anti‑Trump statements and comparing them to his “love and respect” quotes now.
  • Others argue he’s just reacting to someone who helped free a man connected to him, and that personal loyalty explains the softer tone.
  • A common thread is fans feeling confused: they remember Snoop clowning Trump in music videos and cursing him out on camera, and now see him saying Trump did nothing wrong to him and only helped him.

In a sentence: Snoop Dogg once publicly said “F‑ Trump” and blasted everything he stood for, but more recently he’s said Trump did “only good things” for him and that he has “nothing but love and respect” for Trump, especially after the Michael Harris pardon.

TL;DR:

  • Earlier: Snoop called Trump a punk, said “F‑ Donald Trump,” mocked him in videos, and slammed his policies and supporters.
  • Later: After Trump helped pardon Death Row cofounder Michael Harris, Snoop said Trump hadn’t wronged him, had only done positive things for him, and that he has “nothing but love and respect” for Trump.
  • Now: His performance at a Trump inaugural event and these softer comments have sparked big backlash and debate about whether he flipped or sold out.

Information gathered from public forums or data available on the internet and portrayed here.