President Donald Trump took to Truth Social this week to celebrate the long-overdue retirement of Rep. Jerry Nadler (D-NY), a far-left Democrat who spent decades weaponizing his office against conservatives while accomplishing little for the people he claimed to represent.
Trump didn’t mince words. In his post, he torched Nadler as a “psychopathic nut job” and “one of the most disgusting Congressmen in USA History.” With his trademark humor, Trump reminded Americans that he had been beating Nadler for decades — first as a developer in New York, then as President of the United States.
“Jerry Nadler, one of the most disgusting Congressmen in USA History is, at long last, calling it quits – He’s finally leaving Congress!” Trump wrote. “I’ve been beating this bum for 40 years… first as a New York City developer, where he opposed me at every corner, but could NEVER stop me… and then, as your President, where this psychopathic nut job, together with Crazy Nancy Pelosi, impeached me twice, AND LOST, wasting millions of taxpayer dollars.”
Trump concluded his rebuke with a victory lap: “It will be a great day for the U.S.A. when Nadler, a pathetic lightweight, is out of office and leaves our beautiful, and NOW VERY SAFE, Washington, D.C. MAKE AMERICA GREAT AGAIN!”
Naturally, Nadler couldn’t resist firing back with one of his tired rants. The 76-year-old Democrat tried to smear Trump as a “charlatan” and “convicted felon,” even comparing him to Jeffrey Epstein in a desperate low blow. But Nadler’s bitter response only underscored what Trump supporters already know: the man spent decades in Washington waging personal vendettas while ignoring his constituents.
Nadler formally announced he would not seek re-election, ending a half-century in politics. He boasted, “For more than 32 years, I have had the honor of serving the people of New York in the United States Congress. Today, I am announcing that I will not be seeking re-election next year… When I step down at the end of this term, I will have served for 50 years in continuous elected public service.”
But Nadler’s “service” was marked less by accomplishment and more by obstruction. He became infamous for running interference against law enforcement during Trump’s presidency, defending sanctuary city policies, and even railing against DHS when federal officers arrested one of his own staffers for obstructing a security check. Instead of standing with law enforcement, Nadler smeared federal agents for using “heavy-handed tactics” — a theme throughout his career as he prioritized ideology over public safety.
His most notorious role, of course, came during the Trump presidency, when Nadler eagerly led the charge on impeachment — wasting taxpayer money on a partisan circus that collapsed in failure. To the end, Nadler remained more obsessed with attacking Trump than fixing New York’s crime, corruption, or crumbling infrastructure.
Trump’s celebratory post captured what many conservatives — and plenty of fed-up New Yorkers — already believe: Jerry Nadler’s exit is not just overdue, it’s a victory for America.
