
Follow live updates on the Trump administration.
President Trump said on Monday that he “had nothing to do with” a depiction of himself as the pope that was shared on his and White House social media accounts over the weekend, distancing himself from the apparently A.I.-generated image that has agitated Catholics.
“I had nothing to do with it,” Mr. Trump said while taking questions in the Oval Office. “Somebody made up a picture of me dressed like the pope, and they put it out on the internet. That’s not me that did it, I have no idea where it came from — maybe it was A.I. But I have no idea where it came from.”
Mr. Trump, responding to a question about Catholics who are displeased with the image of him dressed in white papal robes and a ceremonial headdress, also attempted to downplay the mounting criticism.
“They can’t take a joke,” Mr. Trump said, quickly telling the reporter, “You don’t mean the Catholics; you mean the fake news media. The Catholics loved it.”
But Catholics across the country, including a prominent American cardinal, have suggested the image is offensive, especially as they mourn the death of Pope Francis. Cardinal Timothy M. Dolan of New York, in Rome for the papal conclave, said when asked about the image on Sunday that he hoped it was not the president’s doing.
“I hope he didn’t have anything to do with that,” Cardinal Dolan said. Asked if he was offended by it, the cardinal demurred but called the image a “brutta figura,” meaning it had made a bad impression.
While the president insisted he did not know about the image of himself as pope, it was posted by the White House on X and by his own Truth Social account, which has shared several apparently A.I.-generated images.
Asked by reporters last week who he would like to be pope, Mr. Trump first made the joke that he was his own “No. 1” choice. He then referred to Cardinal Dolan as “a very good” option. (Mr. Dolan is not a likely candidate.)
Mr. Trump is not Catholic, but his wife, Melania Trump, is Roman Catholic. Mrs. Trump was apparently fond of the image of her husband in papal vestments.
“Actually, my wife thought it was cute,” Mr. Trump insisted on Monday in the Oval Office. “She said, ‘Isn’t that nice?’”
Some Catholic leaders in the United States had said the image could be interpreted as a mockery of their faith. “It’s never appropriate to ridicule or mock the papacy,” Dennis Poust, the executive director of the New York State Catholic Conference, the public policy arm for the state’s Catholic bishops, told The New York Times.
Mr. Trump wooed votes from the nation’s Catholics during both of his campaigns, and during the 2024 race, he chose a vice president who converted to Catholicism as an adult. Vice President JD Vance has been open about how his faith informs his politics.
“I’m fine with people telling jokes,” Mr. Vance posted on social media in response to a question about the image.