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BackBacklash in Japan Over Trump's Use of Anime and Manga Characters
Backlash in Japan Over Trump's Use of Anime and Manga Characters
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BBC World6/10/2026World2 min readUnited Kingdom

Backlash in Japan Over Trump's Use of Anime and Manga Characters

Quick Look

  • A growing backlash in Japan targets Donald Trump's use of anime and manga characters in social media posts.
  • A petition with nearly 20,000 signatures argues this infringes creators' rights and disrespects the characters' values of courage and friendship.

AI-generated summary

Why It Matters

US President Donald Trump has been using popular Japanese anime and manga characters in his social media posts, including depictions of himself as characters like Naruto. This has led to a growing backlash from fans in Japan.

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A backlash is growing in Japan over US President Donald Trump's use of popular anime and manga characters in his posts on social media.

Upset has been brewing since March, when fans started noticing the president using images of - and in one case depicting himself as - iconic Japanese animation characters like Naruto, Pikachu and Yu-Gi-Oh!.

Almost 20,000 people have now signed an online petition, arguing he does not share the values of the characters, and that using them for political reasons could infringe the creators' rights.

The petition calling for Trump and the White House to respect Japanese manga was first launched in March, when a couple of posts caught the attention of some fans.

The official White House X account had released videos combining footage of US military strikes on Iran with clips from Yu-Gi-Oh! and Dragon Ball. A day earlier, the account had published an image with the phrase "Make America Great Again", on top of what appears to be a screengrab from the Pokémon Pokopia video game.

The petition was revived after Trump shared a video on Truth Social on Saturday depicting himself as Naruto Uzumaki, the protagonist and namesake of a popular anime and manga series about a young ninja's journey to become the village leader.

Those who signed the petition and other fans online argue the characters convey the importance of courage, friendship, and perseverance to audiences around the world - and Trump's use of them in this way goes against the creators' intentions.

"Kazuki Takahashi, the creator of Yu-Gi-Oh!, passed away after attempting to rescue someone in the ocean," Suzuki said. "It deeply saddened me that his noble spirit, someone who tried to save others and the message of his work, was used in a military context, and that he is no longer alive to speak up himself."

She wanted to provide a place where people who share the same frustrations could express themselves, and show how many people care about respecting Japanese creators and their content.

One X user found it "hilarious" and thought it would only increase Naruto's international recognition, likening it to the best free publicity in the world. Another user said: "Rather than criticising the clip, I'm proud that Japanese manga has taken the world by storm to the point where the President of America knows Naruto."

Open Questions

  • Will the White House or Trump respond to the petition?
  • What are the legal implications regarding creators' rights?
  • Will this incident affect US-Japan cultural relations?
  • Are there other instances of political figures using copyrighted cultural content without permission?

Related Topics

This article was originally published by BBC World.

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