WATCH: Left-Winger Says He’ll Destroy Food Ordered By Trump Supporters, Whines When DoorDash Drops Him
Screenshot/TikTok/esoteric_eriik
A DoorDash driver who posted a controversial video targeting supporters of President Donald Trump says he was removed from the platform after the clip spread widely online.
The incident gained attention after the social media account “Libs of TikTok” shared a video in which a TikTok user known as “esoteric_eriik” threatened to mishandle deliveries for customers displaying pro-Trump signs. In the clip, which was originally posted on March 13, the driver said that if he saw a MAGA sign outside a customer’s home, he would throw their order out of his vehicle window rather than properly deliver it.
🚨 BREAKING: A DoorDash driver was suspended after posting a video threatening to destroy your food if you support Trump.
Now he’s begging for likes online.
Do you support DoorDash banning his account permanently?
A. Yes
B. No pic.twitter.com/6Ujpm9yt3G— 𝔉🅰𝒏 Karoline Leavitt (@WHLeavitt) March 31, 2026
The video circulated across social media, drawing significant criticism. Shortly afterward, another video surfaced in which the same user said his DoorDash account had been deactivated. In that follow-up clip, posted Saturday, he claimed the attention from what he described as “alt-right Twitter” led to the company removing him from the delivery platform.
In the video, the driver also urged people who do not support MAGA to reconsider using DoorDash, alleging that the company strongly backs supporters of President Trump.
DoorDash did not respond to a request for comment from the Daily Caller News Foundation regarding the situation.
The driver is not the only person who has faced professional consequences after controversial social media comments. Cathy DiFilippo Kiley, who worked as a payroll administrator for the Huron-Superior Catholic District School Board in Ontario, Canada, was dismissed from her position after posting remarks expressing a desire for President Trump to be assassinated.
In another case, Jeremy P. Williams, principal of Rainier Junior-Senior High School in Oregon, was placed on leave following comments related to the assassination of Turning Point USA founder Charlie Kirk. Williams was later arrested on charges involving child pornography.
Several other public figures also faced backlash and employment consequences after posting comments online that were interpreted as celebrating, mocking, or justifying Kirk’s assassination. Among them were MSNBC political analyst Matthew Dowd and Washington Post columnist Karen Attiah.