Harrison Ford blasts Trump as 'world goes to hell': 'I don't know of a greater criminal in history' Wesley StenzelOctober 31, 2025 at 8:47 PM 2.7k Barry Brecheisen/Getty; Andrew Harnik/Getty Harrison Ford on Oct. 29, 2025; Donald Trump on Oct. 30, 2025Key points Harrison Ford says Donald Trump "doesn't have any policies, he has whims." He criticized Trump's policies, saying, "He's making money, hand over fist, while the world goes to hell in a handbasket." The Blade Runner actor declared, "I don't know of a greater criminal in history.
- - Harrison Ford blasts Trump as 'world goes to hell': 'I don't know of a greater criminal in history'
Wesley StenzelOctober 31, 2025 at 8:47 PM
2.7k
Barry Brecheisen/Getty; Andrew Harnik/Getty
Harrison Ford on Oct. 29, 2025; Donald Trump on Oct. 30, 2025Key points -
Harrison Ford says Donald Trump "doesn't have any policies, he has whims."
He criticized Trump's policies, saying, "He's making money, hand over fist, while the world goes to hell in a handbasket."
The Blade Runner actor declared, "I don't know of a greater criminal in history."
Former president Thunderbolt Ross is hulking out at the Trump administration.
Harrison Ford has criticized Donald Trump, slamming the politician's climate policies and announcing that the world is going "to hell" due to the current administration's "hubris" and "lies."
"[He] doesn't have any policies, he has whims," Ford said in a new interview with The Guardian. "It scares the s--- out of me. The ignorance, the hubris, the lies, the perfidy."
He added that Trump "knows better" but "he's an instrument of the status quo and he's making money, hand over fist, while the world goes to hell in a handbasket."
He concluded his scathing assessment with his strongest indictment. "It's unbelievable," he said. "I don't know of a greater criminal in history."
The White House did not immediately respond to Entertainment Weekly's request for comment.
Eli Adé/MARVEL
Harrison Ford's President Thaddeus Ross in 'Captain America: Brave New World'
Ford has advocated for environmental protections for decades, having served as the vice chair of Conservation International and appearing in multiple documentaries about climate change.
The Blade Runner actor zeroed in on Trump's climate policies, speculating that the president opposes wind turbines only because "he has just not seen a gold one" — a not-so-subtle jab at the president's interior decorating tastes.
Ford also said he thinks history will remember Trump's attitude toward climate change — which the commander in chief called "the greatest con job ever perpetrated on the world" at the United Nations last month — as "a clear expression of ignorance, of hubris and purposeful subterfuge."
Ford played a fictional U.S. president in 1997's Air Force One, and also portrayed the president in the Marvel Cinematic Universe in Captain America: Brave New World earlier this year. The latter film hit theaters just weeks after Ford had to evacuate his home in Brentwood, Calif., during the Los Angeles wildfires.
"I knew it was coming. I have been preaching this stuff for 30 years," the Witness star said of extreme weather events like the wildfires. "Everything we've said about climate change has come true. Why is that not sufficient that it alarms people that they change behaviors? Because of the entrenched status quo."
The Trump administration has consistently worked to reverse environmental regulations. On the first day of his second term, the president signed an executive order to withdraw the United States from the Paris Agreement. He has also advocated to nix renewable energy sources like wind farms, attempted the "biggest deregulatory action in U.S. history" through the Environmental Protection Agency, and called for oil companies to "drill, baby, drill."
Sony Pictures/Courtesy Everett
Harrison Ford in 'Air Force One'
Ford, however, told The Guardian that he has faith that climate advocates will be able to swing the pendulum back toward stronger protections. "He's losing ground because everything he says is a lie," Ford said of the president. "I'm confident we can mitigate against [climate change], that we can buy time to change behaviors, to create new technologies, to concentrate more fully on implementation of those policies."
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He continued, "But we have to develop the political will and intellectual sophistication to realize that we human beings are capable of change. We are incredibly adaptive, we are incredibly inventive. If we concentrate on a problem we can fix it most times."
on Entertainment Weekly
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Source: Entertainment
Published: November 01, 2025 at 05:01AM on Source: ALPHA MAG
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