Josh Hokit caused a firestorm at the UFC White House event on Sunday night, directing a vile and baseless slur at former first lady Michelle Obama moments after winning the biggest fight of his career on the South Lawn. The UFC heavyweight had just beaten Derrick Lewis — then grabbed the mic and threw a grenade into the occasion that nobody saw coming.
Josh Hokit’s Michelle Obama Slur Stuns UFC White House Crowd
“Michelle Obama is a man,” Hokit told the crowd. “Am I right, America?” The South Lawn fell into stunned silence. Over on the Ellipse, where tens of thousands had gathered for the UFC Freedom 250 watch party, the reaction split between scattered cheers and bewildered looks. It was ugly, it was unprovoked, and it landed like a lead balloon.
Before firing off the remark, Hokit had presented President Donald Trump with a chain and praised him, then called out fellow heavyweight Alex Pereira, who also fought on the card. A moment of bravado quickly turned into something far more toxic.
Notably, this is not Hokit’s first offence of this kind. Back in January at UFC 324, he labelled WNBA star Brittney Griner “a man” during his post-fight interview. A clear pattern of targeting Black women with derogatory comments — and one the sport cannot keep brushing aside.
Dana White Condemns the Comments — But Had Already Warned They Were Coming
UFC president and CEO Dana White wasted little time distancing himself from Hokit’s words. In a text message to Time Magazine — which the UFC then referenced in its official response — White wrote: “I understand that the Obamas are public figures but I’m completely against saying nasty and false things about people’s families. Everyone knows my position on free speech but I hate that kind of nonsense.”
What makes this even more striking is that White effectively predicted the chaos. In a May interview ahead of the event, he admitted: “I put f—ing Hokit on this card. I promise you, bad things are going to be said. That I can almost guarantee you.” He also confirmed he never tells fighters what they can or cannot say — regardless of the venue.
Worth remembering, Hokit had already been physically removed from the stage at the White House card press conference in May after going after multiple fighters. The warning signs were there in neon lights.
Hokit Shows No Remorse After UFC Freedom 250
Rather than address the fallout directly, Hokit took to Instagram on Monday with a defiant message: “I’m not here to be liked. I’m not here to be a role model. I don’t care. I’m here to succeed.” Meanwhile, messages sent to the White House, Michelle Obama’s office, and Hokit’s own representatives all went unanswered.
The rest of the UFC White House card had largely been respectful. Hokit dismantled that in seconds. One win, one mic, and a whole lot of damage done.