Kangana Ranaut faces backlash over her post about Trump
Kangana Ranaut faced trouble after posting about US President Donald Trump. She later deleted the post and apologized following instructions from the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP).
Kangana, who is a BJP Member of Parliament and a well-known Bollywood actress, got involved in a new controversy. In a social media post, she compared Prime Minister Narendra Modi to Donald Trump. However, she had to delete the post later on the direction of the party leadership.
In her post, Kangana had said that Donald Trump is jealous of Narendra Modi’s global popularity. She also called Modi the father of all alpha males.
This statement caused an immediate reaction within BJP circles. Many party leaders asked BJP president JP Nadda to take notice of the issue.
On JP Nadda’s instructions, Kangana had to delete her post and also give a proper apology.
Respected national president Shri @JPNadda ji called and asked me to delete the tweet I had posted regarding Trump asking Apple CEO Tim Cook not to manufacture in India.
— Kangana Ranaut (@KanganaTeam) May 15, 2025
I regret posting that very personal opinion of mine, as per instructions I immediately deleted it from…
Kangana explained that JP Nadda called her and asked her to delete the tweet she had posted in response to Donald Trump’s statement, in which Trump told Apple CEO Tim Cook to stop manufacturing in India.
Kangana said she is sorry for her personal opinion and, following the party’s instructions, she deleted the post immediately.
Kangana is a strong supporter of Prime Minister Modi. At first, she defended her statement, but later stayed silent after the party leadership’s advice.
It is important to mention that Donald Trump criticized Apple’s manufacturing in India and told Tim Cook not to move production there. During Trump’s time, a 125 percent tariff was placed on imports from China, which made Apple shift its production from China to India.
Now, Apple is producing iPhones on a large scale in India. Around 1.5 million devices (600 tons) have already been exported to the US through special cargo flights.
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