Trump's niece sends 'resounding message' to her uncle with move in his own 'backyard'

Source: rawstory2026/06/30 20:36

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Mary Trump is once again training her fire on her uncle — this time throwing her weight behind a Senate campaign in Florida, the state President Donald Trump now calls home.

In an email sent on behalf of Senate candidate Alex Vindman, the psychologist and outspoken Trump critic framed the race as a direct test of her uncle's standing in his own adopted territory.

"This is Mary Trump," she wrote. "I'm reaching out because American democracy and the rule of law are under threat."

She did not soften the family connection — she led with it. "My uncle, Donald Trump, is using his powers to unleash a reign of terror and revenge against all of us," Mary Trump wrote, accusing the president of pushing conspiracy theories and threatening to nationalize elections.

The heart of her appeal leaned on geography. A Democratic win in Florida, she argued, would carry symbolic weight precisely because of where it happened.

A Democratic victory "here — in Donald Trump's backyard," she wrote, "would send a resounding message that Americans are ready for change."

That framing — that the president could be repudiated on his own turf — is what gives the pitch its edge, and it cuts harder coming from a member of his own family. Mary Trump has spent years positioning herself as a relative willing to say publicly what others in the family won't, and her invocation of "my uncle" turns a standard campaign appeal into something more pointed: a Trump arguing that Trump country is ready to turn on him.

She also took aim at Florida Sen. Ashley Moody, casting the Republican as an enabler of the president's agenda. Moody, she charged, is "pouring gasoline on that fire," and "proudly rubberstamping my uncle's agenda" even as costs climb for Florida families.

Mary Trump pointed to Vindman's history of confronting the president directly. The candidate, a retired Army officer, "has stood up to my uncle before, and he's ready to do it again in the United States Senate," she wrote, referencing Vindman's role as a key figure in Trump's first impeachment.

She closed by casting the contest as a chance to "hold the Trump administration accountable" — a phrase that, coming from a Trump, lands with a weight no ordinary surrogate could supply.

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