Fact Check

German parade floats mocking Trump are real. Here's why the caricatures were displayed

While the date of the parades lined up with Presidents Day in the U.S., several German cities actually held annual Rose Monday parades.

by Emery Winter, Published Feb. 18, 2026


A carnival float shows a caricature of Donald Trump dancing provocatively with the Statue of Liberty under the slogan “Stormy Donald." Liberty is gagged with a red rag that appears to say "MAGA" and Trump is licking at her

Image courtesy of Getty Images


Claim:
Images authentically show floats mocking U.S. President Donald Trump at a German parade, including a float of a pantsless Trump and a gagged Statue of Liberty.
Rating:
True

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In February 2026, social media users (archived) shared images of a parade float with a caricature of U.S. President Donald Trump licking a gagged Statue of Liberty. 

According to a Facebook post, the float was one of three satirizing Trump in "Düsseldorf's infamous Rose Monday carnival parade." Düsseldorf is a city in western Germany.

Different versions of the claim circulated on various social media platforms. For example, another Facebook post (archived) shared an image of the same float, claiming it was from a "German Presidents Day Festival." On X, one user claimed (archived) it was from a carnival in Mainz, Germany. 

A Reddit post (archived) included the image among other parade floats mocking Trump, claiming they were from "Düsseldorf's Rose Monday Parade." Other purported parade floats depicted Trump punching Jesus and trying to devour Europe with Russian President Vladimir Putin.

The images of the satirical Trump and Statue of Liberty float, as well as other floats mocking Trump, were authentic photos depicting scenes from real German parades. While the parades were held on America's Presidents Day, the German parades are annual traditions dating back to before that holiday existed.

Photos of the float with Trump and the Statue of Liberty were available from Getty Images, Alamy and Reuters. All three photo agencies said the float was from a Rose Monday parade in Mainz.

The city of Mainz describes Rose Monday as the highlight of carnival season, which it called its folk festival with "fantastic days and nights of revelry." Carnival starts annually on Nov. 11 and ends on Ash Wednesday. Each year, the city hosts a parade on Rose Monday, the final Monday before Ash Wednesday.

In 2026, Rose Monday was Feb. 16, the same date that the U.S. celebrated Presidents Day. A Mainz Carnival website, which dates these celebrations back to 1838, also confirmed the annual parade was scheduled for Feb. 16.

Congress didn't create Presidents Day, celebrated on the third Monday of February, until 1968.

The Mainz Carnival Museum says that the floats which satirize current events and politics are an "important part of the parade."

The photo of the float with Trump and the Statue of Liberty was often shared alongside the photos of floats depicting Trump punching Jesus and trying to devour Europe with Putin. Getty Images placed the other two floats as being from Düsseldorf.

Düsseldorf, Mainz and Cologne, another German city, are the "three strongholds of the Rhineland Carnival," according to a nonprofit group that seeks to preserve and share Düsseldorf's carnival traditions. Düsseldorf, like Mainz, celebrates Rose Monday with a parade that includes floats satirizing current events and politics.


By Emery Winter

Emery Winter is based in Charlotte, North Carolina, and previously worked for TEGNA'S VERIFY national fact-checking team. They enjoy sports and video games.


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