White House Seeks Out Gamer Culture to Boost Trump's Immigration Agenda
The White House has taken an unconventional approach in its recruitment efforts for Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), embracing video game culture and internet memes as a way to tap into its target demographic: disillusioned young men.
In October, the White House shared a picture on X featuring President Donald Trump dressed as Master Chief from the popular Xbox franchise Halo, standing salute at an American flag with several missing stars. The image included the slogan "Power to the players" in reference to GameStop's marketing campaign. This was not an isolated incident; earlier, the US game retailer and the White House had exchanged a few meme-laden posts.
But on October 27th, the Department of Homeland Security officially joined into the fray with its own Halo-themed post on X, encouraging people to join ICE using imagery reminiscent of futuristic soldier battling aliens. The caption read "Stop the Flood", equating the US's immigrant population with Master Chief's alien enemies. White House Deputy Press Secretary Kush Desai explained that this was a clever tactic.
According to various sources, including Steve Bannon, former chief strategist for Trump's 2016 presidential campaign, and Joshua Green's book 'Devil's Bargain: Steve Bannon, Donald Trump, and the Storming of the Presidency,' the White House has long courted gamers since its very early days of campaigning. The idea is that this demographic โ particularly a subset of disaffected young men โ can be mobilized to support their political agenda.
During the 2016 campaign, the Trump team frequently shared memes featuring internet in-jokes and pop culture references. One notable example was #HillaryHealth, which spread allegations about Hillary Clinton's health, and a series of memes produced by the campaign that seemed tailored to online subcultures. It seems possible that these efforts contributed to Trump's victory.
In 2020, after losing the presidential election, Trump turned his attention to Truth Social and its own social media platform to lambast Joe Biden and other Democrats throughout his four-year term. He has continued to court gamers and the online reactionary right before winning the presidency again. The second Trump administration has also adopted tactics reminiscent of online agitators and trolls.
In December 2022, entrepreneur Elon Musk acquired Twitter and shortly after reinstated Trump's account along with several others that had been banned. As a prominent X account owner who often invokes gamer culture on his own posts and shares memes, Musk has relaxed the restrictions on hate speech on the platform, aligning more closely with the kind of toxic gamer culture the White House is now courting.
Recently, ICE used another Halo-themed meme to promote itself by posting a picture featuring a tank with an armed soldier inside and the words 'Destroy the flood' along with the caption "Join.ICE.gov". The US video game industry at large has been tight-lipped regarding this campaign; for millions of Americans who are gamers but disheartened by administration actions, watching this unfold can be frustrating.
As the White House continues to lean into video game iconography and internet memes as part of their recruitment efforts, it raises questions about how effectively they will be able to tap into gamer culture. The issue at hand has created a complex relationship between the administration's reactionary policies and online subcultures like gaming.
The White House has taken an unconventional approach in its recruitment efforts for Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), embracing video game culture and internet memes as a way to tap into its target demographic: disillusioned young men.
In October, the White House shared a picture on X featuring President Donald Trump dressed as Master Chief from the popular Xbox franchise Halo, standing salute at an American flag with several missing stars. The image included the slogan "Power to the players" in reference to GameStop's marketing campaign. This was not an isolated incident; earlier, the US game retailer and the White House had exchanged a few meme-laden posts.
But on October 27th, the Department of Homeland Security officially joined into the fray with its own Halo-themed post on X, encouraging people to join ICE using imagery reminiscent of futuristic soldier battling aliens. The caption read "Stop the Flood", equating the US's immigrant population with Master Chief's alien enemies. White House Deputy Press Secretary Kush Desai explained that this was a clever tactic.
According to various sources, including Steve Bannon, former chief strategist for Trump's 2016 presidential campaign, and Joshua Green's book 'Devil's Bargain: Steve Bannon, Donald Trump, and the Storming of the Presidency,' the White House has long courted gamers since its very early days of campaigning. The idea is that this demographic โ particularly a subset of disaffected young men โ can be mobilized to support their political agenda.
During the 2016 campaign, the Trump team frequently shared memes featuring internet in-jokes and pop culture references. One notable example was #HillaryHealth, which spread allegations about Hillary Clinton's health, and a series of memes produced by the campaign that seemed tailored to online subcultures. It seems possible that these efforts contributed to Trump's victory.
In 2020, after losing the presidential election, Trump turned his attention to Truth Social and its own social media platform to lambast Joe Biden and other Democrats throughout his four-year term. He has continued to court gamers and the online reactionary right before winning the presidency again. The second Trump administration has also adopted tactics reminiscent of online agitators and trolls.
In December 2022, entrepreneur Elon Musk acquired Twitter and shortly after reinstated Trump's account along with several others that had been banned. As a prominent X account owner who often invokes gamer culture on his own posts and shares memes, Musk has relaxed the restrictions on hate speech on the platform, aligning more closely with the kind of toxic gamer culture the White House is now courting.
Recently, ICE used another Halo-themed meme to promote itself by posting a picture featuring a tank with an armed soldier inside and the words 'Destroy the flood' along with the caption "Join.ICE.gov". The US video game industry at large has been tight-lipped regarding this campaign; for millions of Americans who are gamers but disheartened by administration actions, watching this unfold can be frustrating.
As the White House continues to lean into video game iconography and internet memes as part of their recruitment efforts, it raises questions about how effectively they will be able to tap into gamer culture. The issue at hand has created a complex relationship between the administration's reactionary policies and online subcultures like gaming.