www.axios.com /2025/06/02/trump-truth-posts-conspiracies-biden-executed

Trump's Truth posts mix wild conspiracies with market-moving policies

Avery Lotz 4-5 minutes 6/2/2025
Trump looks at his phone.

Donald Trump talks on the phone prior to the F1 Grand Prix of Miami at Miami International Autodrome on May 5, 2024. Photo: Clive Mason/Getty Images

President Trump's Truth Social account is full of jarring juxtapositions: major trade policy announcements and presidential nominations broken up by bizarre conspiracies and personal boasts.

Why it matters: The president's words matter, whether he's moving markets with tariff threats or spreading unfounded conspiracies about his political rivals, and the White House has mimicked Trump's bellicose online persona.

Driving the news: The president late on Saturday shared an outlandish conspiracy from another user who said that former President Biden had been "executed in 2020" and was replaced by clones or robots.

What they're saying: The White House didn't directly respond when asked about Trump sharing conspiracy theories.

The intrigue: Between those two posts, Trump made and shared (real) political and economic news.

Yes, but: The things Trump doesn't post are just as striking.

Context: It's not a new phenomenon for Trump to platform unproven conspiracies and misinformation on social media or in the White House.

The bottom line: With no fact-checks or consequences for falsehoods, Trump can be, as he's shared multiple posts saying, "right about everything."

Go deeper: Trump cites mainstream outlets, despite fights

Editor's note: This story has been updated with Trump's statement on the Boulder, Colo., attack.