Celebrities who have spoken out against Trump
The list of celebrities who have stood up to trump and publicly disagreed with the legislation he has introduced during his fortnight in power is rapidly growing. Many have used their public platform to broadcast their political dismay and joined demonstrations against the new presidents decisions, encouraging others to do the same.
-
America Ferrera spoke at the Women's March, Addressing Trump she said "You, Mr. Trump, are living in an outdated fantasy of a bigoted America." Photo: BRINSON+BANKS/New York Times -
Rihanna, who is an immigrant from Barbados, is unsurprisingly not a fan of Trumps's. She attended the Women's March on New York, and tweeted "Disgusted! The news is devastating! America is being ruined right before our eyes! What an immoral pig you have to be to implement such BS!!" in response to the Immigration Executive Order Photo: Pascal Le Segretain -
Meryl Streep gave a politically charged speech at The Golden Globes aimed at Trump, although she did not mention him by name. Trump responded by dismissing Streep as 'a Hilary lover' and labelled her 'overrated.' Photo: Martin Schoeller/AUGUST/Raven & Snow -
Nick Offerman shared a photo of him at The Women's March on Washington and over the weekend he tweeted "Dear @realDonaldTrump Shove it up your ass. Sincerely, America" Photo: Twitter -
Our favourite couple John Legend and Chrissy Teigan also attended the Women's March. Teigan also shared a photo of Trump on her Instagram last year on his 70th birthday captioned "Happy Birthday you Monumental Asshole." Photo: Instagram/johnlegend -
Bella and Gigi Hadid attended a protest against Trump's Immigration Executive Order- also known as the Muslim ban. Their father Mohamed Hadid is originally from Jordan, and was brought up in the Muslim faith. Photo: Getty -
Film director Michael Moore spoke during the Women's March on Washington and also urged Americans to join him in protesting the Immigration Executive Order, at JFK airport. Photo: AP/Jose Luis Magana -
Anne Hathaway returned from a month long hiatus from social media to post a side by side photo of Anne Frank and a 5-year-old Syrian girl bloodied during an airstrike in Aleppo, captioned with ""I wasn't planning on coming back so soon, but this moment cannot be met with silence." Photo: Getty Images -
Arnold Sshwarzenegger said before Trump's election that he would not be voting for him and condemned his comments about women, despite being member of The Republican Party. Photo: PAUL DRINKWATER -
Shakira condemned Trump's comments on Mexicans as hateful, saying of his supporters "No one living in this century should stand behind so much ignorance." Photo: AP -
Katy Perry campaigned for Hillary Clinton during the presidential campaign and was part of the "Artist Table" for the Women's March. Photo: JOHN LOCHER -
Louis C.K. begged the American public not to vote for Trump: "Please stop it with voting for Trump," he wrote. "It was funny for a little while. But the guy is Hitler." -
Samantha Bee has been vocal about her hatred for Donald Trump, even developing a dictionary of terms she used to describe him on her show including "orange monkey." Photo: PETER YANG -
John Oliver has slammed Donald Trump on his show Last Week Tonight, calling him a "litigious serial liar with a string of broken business ventures and the support of a former Klan leader" and renaming him 'Donald Drumpf'. -
Sarah Silverman has taken up Oliver's call, choosing to replace Trump with Drumpf - the original name of his ancestors - in all of her negative tweets about him. Photo: Getty -
Olivia Wilde has been very vocal about her disdain for Trump, using her public platform on Twitter to speak out. On January 29 Wilde tweeted "I feel sick. So ashamed of our maniac-in-chief. And SO PROUD of our protesters. #RESIST" Photo: STEVE GRANITZ -
Actress Jennifer Lawrence tweeted her support for Muslims, saying "I pray for sanity and compassion to return to the White House." Photo: AP -
Actor Dev Patel said he was devastated by the Immigration Executive Order introduced by Trump, labelling it "horrible" and "divisive". Photo: Steven Siewert -
Actor Jack Black told The Today Show he would choose anybody over Trump for president, even Kanye West. -
Miley Cyrus is a strong supporter of Planned Parenthood, and after Trump's 'Muslim ban' she tweeted an image that said "I stand with immigrants." -
Kim Kardashian West tweeted some 'statistics' comparing the small number of 'terrorism deaths' vs massive death toll of gun violence in America. Photo: Andy Kropa -
J.K Rowling quotes a former Indiana governor on twitter over the weekend saying "calls to ban Muslims from entering the U.S. are offensive and unconstitutional." -
Professor Stephen Hawking told Good Morning Britain that he believes Trump "is a demagogue who appeals to the lowest common denominator." Photo: AP -
Actress Emma Watson sat with the crowd during the Women's March on Washington, she is vocal on women's issues and tweeted that Trump's election would make her fight harder for what she believes in. Photo: AP Photo/Jose Luis Magana -
Madonna performed during the Women's March on Washington calling the march the beginning of a rebellion against tyranny and marginalization. Photo: AP/Jose Luis Magana -
Lena Dunham with Amy Poehler and Jenni Konner at the Women's March on Washington. -
Bruce Springsteen spoke out against Trump's Immigration Executive Order at a concert in Adelaide saying "Tonight we want to add our voices to the thousands of Americans who are protesting in airports around our country," he said. "The Muslim ban, the detention of foreign nationals and refugees -- America is a nation of immigrants and we find this antidemocratic and fundamentally un-American" he also refused an invitation to play at Trump's Inauguration. -
George Clooney called Trump out saying "he's a fascist; a xenophobic fascist." Photo: Getty -
Mark Ruffalo attending the Women's March on NYC on the weekend of Trump's inauguration. Photo: Facebook
of