The White House posted an AI-generated image on Monday to mark Star Wars Day, placing President Donald Trump inside the Star Wars universe alongside Baby Yoda. The image shows Trump dressed as the hero of Disney’s The Mandalorian, a character known for following a strict code called The Way. The post spread quickly across social media, getting a strong reaction from Star Wars fans.
In the image, Trump is shown wearing Mandalorian armor and holding a small satchel that cradles Baby Yoda, the beloved alien child from the hit Disney+ series. However, one detail immediately caught the attention of die-hard Star Wars fans: Trump is holding the Mandalorian helmet in his hand, with his face fully visible.
This goes directly against the Mandalorian code, which requires a Mandalorian to always keep their face covered, or risk being seen as a traitor to their people. According to The Sun, the White House shared the image with the caption, “In a galaxy that demands strength, America stands ready. This is the way. May the 4th be with you.”
The White House has a pattern of getting Star Wars references wrong
In the show, there are some exceptions to the no-helmet rule, such as when actor Pedro Pascal, who plays Din Djarin, appears on screen without the helmet in specific moments. But those moments are rare and serve a clear purpose in the story. Seeing the rule broken so openly in a promotional image was jarring for fans.
Some political analysts have also been paying close attention to Trump’s moves lately, with one commentator predicting Trump may walk away from the presidency before his term ends. This is not the first time the White House has made a Star Wars misstep. Earlier in 2025, the White House shared an AI-generated image of Trump as a muscular Jedi, but the character was holding a red lightsaber, which in Star Wars lore belongs to the Sith, the villains of the franchise.
One user on social media wrote, “I hope you get sued for this intellectual property appropriation.” Another wrote, “I hope you get sued for this intellectual property appropriation.” The Star Wars posts are part of a broader pattern of AI-generated images coming from the White House and Trump’s own accounts.
Just days before the Star Wars Day image, Trump shared an image on his Truth Social account showing himself dressed as the pope, which drew criticism from Republicans and former Italian Prime Minister Matteo Renzi. These repeated incidents suggest that AI-generated imagery has become a regular tool for the administration.
As Star Wars creator George Lucas once said, “Good guys are green and blue, bad guys are red.” Fans online were quick to reference this when pointing out the red lightsaber error from earlier this year.
One fan commented, “Imagine watching Star Wars and thinking that the ones with the red lightsabers are the good guys.” Meanwhile, Trump has also been making headlines for other reasons, including naming a Supreme Court justice as his new ally in his push to restore his tariff plans.
The repeated errors in Star Wars references have led many fans to question how much thought goes into these posts before they are shared publicly. For a franchise as detail-rich and widely loved as Star Wars, fans tend to notice when something is off, and they are rarely quiet about it.
Published: May 5, 2026 02:00 pm