- Trump was caught on camera responding obscenely to a heckler during a Michigan auto plant visit
- Trump raised his middle finger at the heckler and appeared to respond by mouthing the F-bomb
- The heckler reportedly shouted "pedophile protector"
US President Donald Trump was caught on camera Tuesday responding obscenely to a heckler during a visit to an auto plant in Michigan, according to a video circulating on social media.
During a tour of the Ford F-150 factory in Detroit, Michigan, Trump is seen on an elevated walkway overlooking the factory floor dressed in a long black overcoat.
After some shouting, Trump appeared to point at the heckler on the factory floor, scowling and saying a few choice words, before raising a middle finger. He appeared to respond by mouthing the F-bomb at the person.
US President Donald Trump gave the middle finger after he was heckled during a tour of a car manufacturing plant in Michigan.
— The Advertiser (@theTiser) January 14, 2026
It's been reported the heckler called President Trump a “pedophile protector”. #donaldtrump #unitedstates pic.twitter.com/nF0ISFYNmJ
The heckler has not been identified, but White House spokesperson Steven Cheung told AFP they got what they deserved.
"A lunatic was wildly screaming expletives in a complete fit of rage, and the President gave an appropriate and unambiguous response," Cheung said.
The heckler seemed to shout, in part, "pedophile protector," TMZ reported.
The 79-year-old Republican's second term has been dogged by demands to release the files related to convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein, who was once a friend to Trump and the jet set.
Epstein, a financier, was awaiting trial for allegedly trafficking underage girls when he died in a New York jail cell in 2019 -- a death officially ruled a suicide but long the subject of conspiracy theories amplified by Trump's supporters.
Trump approved bipartisan legislation to release the files, but his Department of Justice has failed to meet the December 19 deadline to release them all.
Earlier this month, justice officials said it was still reviewing more than two million documents for release.
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