Trump Vs Biden Election Parodies
Also known as: Election Infobox Parodies · Fake Election Memes
Trump vs. Biden Election Parodies is an image edit series that emerged in October 2020, reimagining the U.S. presidential election as if it were taking place in foreign or entirely fictional countries. Each parody takes the official Wikipedia infobox for the 2020 race and swaps in localized versions of Donald Trump and Joe Biden, complete with translated names and region-appropriate photos. The format spread rapidly across Reddit, Twitter, Discord, and 4chan in the weeks leading up to Election Day.
TL;DR
Trump vs.
Overview
Origin & Background
How It Spread
How to Use This Meme
The template follows a consistent formula:
Start with the Wikipedia infobox layout for the 2020 U.S. presidential election
Replace "United States" with a different country (real or fictional)
Rename the candidates to phonetic or cultural equivalents of "Donald Trump" and "Joe Biden"
Swap the candidate photos with politicians, public figures, or generated images that fit the target culture
Adjust party names, electoral details, and other metadata to match the fictional setting
Cultural Impact
Fun Facts
The Dutch version's use of Geert Wilders as the Trump stand-in was widely praised for its accuracy, since Wilders is often compared to Trump in European political commentary.
The subreddit r/ImaginaryElections existed before the meme but became closely associated with it during October 2020.
The format required genuine knowledge of other countries' political systems, making it one of the more "educational" meme templates of the 2020 election cycle.
Biden's 2020 victory marked the first time an incumbent president lost re-election since George H.W. Bush in 1992.
Derivatives & Variations
Historical period edits:
Users created versions depicting the Trump-Biden dynamic in ancient Rome, medieval Europe, and other historical settings, keeping the Wikipedia formatting but adjusting it for the era[2].
Fictional universe edits:
Versions set in Star Wars, Lord of the Rings, and other fictional universes reimagined the election with in-universe candidates and political parties[2].
Regional deep cuts:
Some of the most popular versions went beyond obvious country swaps to depict elections in obscure micronations or disputed territories, with hyper-specific cultural references[2].
Frequently Asked Questions
References (3)
- 1
- 2Donald Trumpencyclopedia
- 32020 United States presidential electionencyclopedia