Donald Trump Humiliated by Giant ‘Trump Go Home’ Message Carved Into Snow During Davos Arrival

Air Force One is usually meant to be the simplest part of any foreign trip. The president boards the plane, flies out, arrives, and gets on with the meetings. But on January 20, nothing went smoothly for Donald Trump. Shortly after takeoff, the aircraft was forced to turn back to Washington, D.C., because of an electrical problem. The flight was scrapped, and Trump was left waiting for hours. What should have been a routine journey dragged on late into the night, keeping him grounded until after midnight. By the time the plane finally took off for Europe, the timetable was already ruined and the trip felt tense before it had even begun.
Things did not improve on arrival. As the plane descended toward the Swiss Alps and prepared to land near Davos, something unexpected appeared in the snow below. Near the flight path, someone had carved the words “TRUMP GO HOME” in huge letters, clearly designed to be seen from the air. It was not a quick prank. It took effort, planning, and time, and it was placed so that the president could not miss it while looking out of the window. It was a very direct message, delivered before he even touched the ground.
The moment was later discussed on CBS News, where senior correspondent Ed O’Keefe explained what many viewers were already thinking. He said the message was impossible to ignore and reflected growing anger across Europe. According to him, frustration with the United States has been building, and many European leaders and citizens are no longer hiding how upset they feel. They are not just complaining quietly anymore; they are actively showing it.
Higher up in the mountains, another group made their feelings even clearer. A report from the Swiss outlet Watson said around ten protesters climbed nearly 800 meters up icy, dangerous slopes, carrying hundreds of torches. Once they reached a clear spot, they arranged the flames to spell out “NO KINGS.” Against the dark mountain side, the burning letters were impossible to miss. The message was blunt and symbolic, rejecting strongman politics and the idea of any leader acting like royalty.
Inside the World Economic Forum, Trump’s speech did little to calm things down. He drifted into familiar complaints, criticising NATO again and even mixing up Greenland and Iceland while speaking. Online reactions were fast and brutal. One social media user said nobody wanted his childish behaviour around them. Another wrote that Trump was getting exactly the kind of welcome he deserved and should expect that sort of resistance wherever he goes.
That atmosphere followed him throughout the visit. The trip was less about serious policy discussions and more about tension and backlash. Even at high-profile dinners, the mood was reportedly uncomfortable. Some guests jeered at people linked to Trump, and there were claims that major figures, including Christine Lagarde, left events early rather than sit through the spectacle.
The backlash is not limited to Europe. Back in the United States, Trump continues to face resistance at home as well. In California, Democratic Governor Gavin Newsom remains a vocal opponent. In Hollywood, Trump’s star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame was vandalised once again. Someone sprayed the words “TRAITOR, TYRANT” across it in bold, capital letters, mimicking Trump’s own writing style. Photos of the damage quickly spread online and went viral.
Whether it is written in snow on a Swiss mountainside or sprayed onto concrete in Los Angeles, the message aimed at Donald Trump is remarkably consistent. People are not just criticising him quietly; they are telling him, loudly and publicly, to go away. For a man who thrives on attention and hates being ignored, the problem in Switzerland was not a lack of noise. It was that even the mountains seemed to be answering back.



