Karoline Leavitt tries to turn a bad Trump moment into a win and it starts coming apart fast over something she didn’t think anyone would catch

sWhite House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt tried to force a win where one didn’t exist — stepping out to sell President Donald Trump’s war as a success even as the reality around it continued to shift and support remained anything but overwhelming.

With pressure building and the administration still searching for a version of events that holds together, Leavitt leaned into the message anyway. But in trying to lock it in, she pushed the spin a step too far and set up a moment that would start to unravel almost as soon as she put it out.

US White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt speaks to the press outside the White House in Washington, DC, on January 12, 2026. (Photo by ANDREW CABALLERO-REYNOLDS / AFP via Getty Images)

Leavitt, posting to X — a platform that has become a friendlier environment for the Trump administration since Elon Musk’s takeover — attempted to frame the president’s military campaign as a clear success, leaning on a series of polls to argue that Americans were firmly behind it.

Despite the favorable terrain, it quickly became clear that this wasn’t going to go the way she expected.

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In a post Thursday, March 19, Leavitt claimed that an “overwhelming” majority of Americans supported Trump’s military action against Tehran, pointing to multiple polls included in a White House press release to back it up.

“Americans Agree that Operation Epic Fury Is an Overwhelming Success,” Leavitt wrote.

But the claim didn’t hold up for long.

X slapped a community note on her post warning that the six polls she linked to in a White House press release only showed an “overwhelming” number of Trump’s MAGA base supported his strike on Iran not a majority of Americans.

“The White House’s polls mentioned in the link only refers to MAGA Republicans or Republicans being in favor of the war, not the broader American public. This excludes Democrats and Independents being polled which skews the data and misrepresents America’s views as a whole,” X’s community note read.

Social media brokered no punches in calling out Leavitt over her duplicity.

“If we lied to the government like this we would go to jail. Yet, you lying to the people who are forced to pay your salary is literally your entire job,” an X user vented.

Journalist Mehdi Hasan added, “She is linking to an article showing only MAGA Republicans support the war, and then claiming ‘Americans agree’ with it. Her own link shows her to be a liar. She’s a proud and open liar. Reporters should treat her as such.”

X user No Kings spelled it out in four words, “It’s an Epic FAILURE.”

But the correction didn’t just come from critics or political opponents, it came from the same ecosystem where Trump and his allies have long thrived, turning what was meant to be a controlled message into a public unraveling.

Some self-identified supporters made clear that the message wasn’t landing, rejecting both the framing of the war and the attempt to speak on their behalf.

Navy veteran and self-described “America First” supporter known as The Patriot Voice wrote, “NO THE HELL WE DO NOT!!! STOP GASLIGHTING US!”

“Absolute bull crap. More than half of us are completely against this,” another user added.

“There is no more MAGA,” wrote X user Cian O’Brien. “Trump made sure that it was destroyed when he told us he did not need us as his supporters anymore… We haven’t forgotten. Trump has betrayed us. This administration betrays us. You betray us.”

Even some figures aligned with Trump’s broader media orbit appeared to take note of how the moment was playing out.

“Comment section going well. Community note too,” wrote Owen Shroyer, a former War Room host on InfoWars.

The backlash underscored a growing disconnect between the administration’s messaging and public sentiment, but Leavitt doubled down.

Speaking with reporters the following day, she brushed aside the mounting criticism, insisting the reaction online didn’t reflect reality.

“I would remind people X is not real life. Trump lives in the real world. There is nothing more America First than taking out terrorists who have maimed and killed our servicemen and women,” she said.

She reinforced that stance in a separate post on X, rejecting the idea that Trump’s base is splintering even as criticism from within it continued to build.

“As I’ve said repeatedly, Americans trust President Trump as their Commander-in-Chief and support his efforts to eliminate terrorist threats and keep us safe. There is no ‘MAGA fracturing,’ no matter how many times the media tries to claim otherwise.”

Trump, without congressional approval or any explanation to Americans beforehand, launched an ongoing military strike against Iran on Feb. 28 which has left at least 13 Americans dead, dozens more injured, and killed more than 2,000 Iranians, according to the latest news reports on war casualties.

In the weeks since, the administration has offered shifting explanations for the operation, while struggling to maintain a consistent narrative around its goals and consequences.

Recent polling reflects that divide.

A Reuters/Ipsos survey conducted between March 17 and March 19 found that while 77 percent of Republicans support the war, just 28 percent of independents and 6 percent of Democrats agree.

Overall, 59 percent of Americans oppose the conflict, compared to 37 percent who support it — a gap that makes Leavitt’s claim of “overwhelming” backing even harder to sustain.

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