As Donald Trump escalates his war of words with music icons like Bruce Springsteen and Taylor Swift, Neil Young has stepped into the fray—loudly. In a blistering open letter, the legendary musician condemns the former president’s distractions and failures, urging him to prioritize America over personal vendettas. The clash underscores a growing cultural divide between artists and the political class—and a defining moment in the intersection of music, protest, and power.
A message from the music front
Neil Young has never been one to bite his tongue, especially when it comes to politics. This week, he took to his personal website with a direct and unfiltered message for Donald Trump, following the former president’s online feud with Bruce Springsteen. In the post, Young thanked Springsteen for speaking truth to power, while reminding Trump of the responsibilities he continues to neglect.

“Bruce and thousands of musicians think you are ruining America,” Young wrote late Monday. “You worry about that instead of the dyin’ kids in Gaza… STOP THINKING ABOUT WHAT ROCKERS ARE SAYING. Think about saving America from the mess you made.”
Young’s comments reflect his growing concern not only with Trump’s political actions, but also with the performative nature of his online presence. The artist’s tone is defiant, his message clear: art is resistance, and musicians are citizens too—with every right, and arguably a duty, to speak out.
Springsteen vs. Trump: The spark that lit the flame
The confrontation began last Friday during a Bruce Springsteen concert in the UK, when the “Born to Run” legend called out the Trump administration as “corrupt, incompetent, and treasonous.” That line, uttered mid-set, ignited a firestorm on social media and prompted a furious response from Trump via his platform Truth Social.
Trump labeled Springsteen a “dried out ‘prune’ of a rocker,” suggesting ominously that he should “KEEP HIS MOUTH SHUT until he gets back into the Country.” The veiled threat did little to deter Springsteen, who reiterated his criticisms at his next concert appearance.
It wasn’t just Springsteen in Trump’s crosshairs. On the same day, the former president took aim at Taylor Swift, claiming her popularity declined after he admitted disliking her. The bizarre personal attacks came without evidence but drew swift backlash online. For Neil Young, the episode epitomized everything that’s wrong with Trump’s priorities. “You are more worried about yourself than AMERICA,” Young wrote. “Wake up Trump!! Remember what the White House is?”
Young’s political legacy
This isn’t Neil Young’s first clash with Trump—nor his first public act of resistance. For years, the Canadian-American singer-songwriter has criticized the former president’s policies and rhetoric. From climate change and COVID-19 to immigration and press freedom, Young has spoken out forcefully against what he sees as authoritarian tendencies.
In April, Young expressed concern that his political views could result in him being barred from returning to the U.S. after his European tour. Despite his fears, he doubled down on his activism, appearing alongside Joan Baez and Maggie Rogers at a Bernie Sanders rally in Los Angeles just weeks later.
Now, with the 2024 election cycle ramping up and cultural tensions boiling, Young’s voice joins a growing chorus of public figures calling for accountability—both from politicians and the citizens who support them.“You are forgetting your real job,” Young continued. “You work for us. Wake up Republicans! This guy is out of control. We need a real president!”
Music, protest, and a divided America
While celebrity political statements are hardly new, the intensity of the current moment marks a shift. Artists like Springsteen and Young are no longer simply performing protest songs—they are engaging directly with power structures and calling out abuses in real time. It’s a bold move in an industry where corporate sponsorships and brand partnerships often discourage controversy. But for musicians with decades-long careers and devoted fan bases, the stakes are different. They have less to lose and more to say. As Young noted in a separate post sharing a video of Springsteen’s onstage remarks: “THANKS BRUCE.”
“As a Canadian-American dual citizen, I stand with the great majority, thanking you for speaking so eloquently and truthfully on behalf of the American people,” he added. “Your great songs of America ring true as you sing them to Europe and the world!”
The bigger picture
Whether Trump’s rants are performative or strategic, they highlight a deeper divide in American society—between cultural leaders and political ones, between truth and spin, and between the idea of democracy and its current reality. For Young, Springsteen, and many others, silence is no longer an option.
Their voices—gravelly with time, but steady with conviction—serve as reminders of a time when music moves people to march, vote, and protest. Now, as the U.S. faces another contentious election and a world in crisis, their message is as urgent as ever. As Neil Young put it: “We are with you my old friend.” The old guard of American rock may be aging, but they’re far from fading. If anything, they’re turning up the volume.