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Natalie Maines Fiery Trump Rant 23 Years Later

Natalie Maines of the country music icons The Chicks issued a blistering rant about President Donald Trump this week.In a foul-mouthed tirade posted to Instagra...

Natalie Maines Fiery Trump Rant 23 Years Later
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Natalie Maines of the country music icons The Chicks issued a blistering rant about President this week.

In a foul-mouthed tirade posted to Instagram on Monday, the 51-year-old country singer called Trump, 79, a 'fugly slut' and warned that 'Our democracy is disappearing right before our eyes.'

Maines – one of the earliest victims of so-called '' – delivered her rant 23 years after she said on stage that her band, , was ashamed of former President George W. Bush's 2003 invasion of .

The political outburst led the trio – which also includes sisters Emily Strayer and Martie Maguire – to be banned from thousands of country music stations and kicked off a wave of death threats directed at them.

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The Daily Mail has reached out to the Trump administration for comment. 

Maines kicked off her post with an official portrait of Trump in which he grimly stares into the camera with one eyebrow raised while standing in front of an American flag.

Natalie Maines of the country music icons The Chicks issued a blistering, foul-mouthed rant about President Donald Trump on Instagram on Monday, in which she called him a 'fugly slut'; pictured with Emily Robinson (L) of The Chicks in 2023 in Cardiff, Wales

Maines included this official portrait of President Donald Trump as she claimed that 'This fugly slut is using your gas money to pay the insurrectionists'

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'Our democracy is disappearing right before our eyes,' Maines began her caption. 

'This fugly slut is using your gas money to pay the insurrectionists,' she continued, seemingly alluding both to Trump's war in Iran, which has caused a massive hike in gas prices, and to a controversial deal he struck with the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) to create a nearly $1.8 billion fund that Democrats and ethics experts have fiercely criticized.

'But don't worry about it. I'm sure posting selfies will fix everything,' Maines continued.

'Our democracy is disappearing right before our eyes,' Maines wrote. The Chicks were banned from thousands of country stations and sent a bevy of death threats after she criticized George W. Bush's invasion of Iraq in London in 2003; seen in 2023 at Glastonbury

Maines subsequently issued an apology for her remarks about Bush, but in 2006 she rescinded it. 'I don't feel that way anymore,' she said in an interview with Time. 'I don't feel he is owed any respect whatsoever'; Bush is. pictured on May 1, 2003

Maines included photos of insurrectionist rioters entering the Capitol in Washington, DC, on January 6, 2021

She seemingly alluding both to Trump's war in Iran, which has caused a massive hike in gas prices, and to a controversial deal he struck with the IRS to create a $1.8b 'Anti-Weaponization Fund' to issue formal apologies and provide monetary relief to claimants; rioters are picutred in the Capitol on January 6, 2021

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Her fury appears to have been sparked by news that the president, his sons Don Jr. and Eric and the Trump Organization had filed a lawsuit against the Treasury and IRS in the Southern District of Florida in response to the leak of their tax returns.

In exchange for dropping the lawsuit, the IRS agreed to create a $1.776 billion 'Anti-Weaponization Fund,' which will be able to issue formal apologies and provide monetary relief to claimants. 

The fund will be governed by a five-member commission appointed by the Attorney General, who was appointed by Trump. Trump will also have the power to remove any member from the commission.

Maines alleged in her comment that a previous post calling Trump a 'fugly slut' had been taken down; pictured with Emily Robison (L) and Martie Maguire of The Chicks in 2024 in Chicago at the Democratic National Convention

The Dixie Chicks later shortened their name to just The Chicks in June 2020, following years of criticism over the connections 'Dixie' has to the history of slavery in the US; Maines is pictured in 

'Just so you know, we're ashamed that the president of the United States is from Texas,' she said on stage at a concert in London. 

Her comments and the backlash to them from fans and corporate country radio stations led to a rapid commercial decline for The Chicks.

They also faced pushback from other country artists who were publicly supportive of Bush and the Iraq War, among whom Toby Keith was one of the most vocal.

Maines subsequently issued an apology for her remarks, but in 2006 she rescinded it.

'I don't feel that way anymore,' she said in an interview with Time. 'I don't feel he is owed any respect whatsoever.'

The Dixie Chicks later shortened their name to just The Chicks in June 2020, following years of criticism over the connections 'Dixie' has to the history of slavery in the US.

The Chicks also cited protests brought on by the killing of George Floyd and the ongoing Black Lives Matter movement as inspirations to change their name.

The group claimed they had wanted to change 'that stupid name' for years after they settled on it while they were still in their teens.

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