Norms Impact
Olympics turn political as US athletes speak out against Trump
A sitting president publicly targeted an American Olympian for dissent, eroding the civic norm that government power should not intimidate citizens into silence.
Feb 16, 2026
Sources
Summary
President Trump publicly attacked U.S. Olympic freestyle skier Hunter Hess on Truth Social after Hess said he felt conflicted representing Team USA amid the country’s political climate.
The presidency was used as a megaphone to single out and stigmatize an individual citizen for protected political speech during an international event.
The practical consequence is a chilling signal to athletes and other public figures that criticizing federal leadership can trigger direct retaliation from the nation’s top office.
Reality Check
When a president uses the bully pulpit to punish a private citizen for political speech, it normalizes state-backed intimidation and teaches every American that dissent can make you a target. This conduct is not likely criminal on these facts because it is insult and stigmatization, not an official deprivation of rights or a directive to use state power; the federal civil-rights crimes most implicated by true state retaliation—18 U.S.C. §§ 241 and 242—generally require coercive action beyond rhetoric. But it still violates core governance norms by leveraging presidential authority to chill speech, turning public office into a weapon against ordinary constitutional participation.
Detail
<p>During a press conference at the Winter Games, U.S. freestyle skier Hunter Hess told reporters he had “mixed emotions” about representing the United States, citing “a lot going on” in the country that he opposed and adding that wearing the flag did not mean he represented “everything that’s going on in the U.S.”</p><p>Hours later, President Trump responded on Truth Social, calling Hess a “real loser” and saying it was “very hard to root for someone like this” while watching the games.</p><p>The exchange followed comments by U.S. figure skater Amber Glenn criticizing the administration’s policies toward LGBTQ people and expressing hope to use her platform to help others. Snowboarder Chloe Kim publicly defended Hess and said unity among athletes mattered.</p><p>Vice President Vance, responding after being booed at opening ceremonies in Milan, said athletes who “enter the political arena” should expect “pushback.” Democrats including Sen. Chris Coons criticized the president’s attack as crossing a line of civility, while Rep. Jim Jordan dismissed athletes’ stated discomfort.</p>