Rozonda Thomas, known to fans as Chilli of the iconic R&B group TLC, found herself at the center of a political controversy after federal campaign finance records surfaced online showing several donations made in her name to Trump-affiliated organizations. The records, filed with the Federal Election Commission and linked to an address publicly associated with the Stone Mountain, Georgia singer, showed contributions totaling over a thousand dollars spread across multiple Republican fundraising entities, including the Trump National Committee JFC and a group called Never Surrender Inc.
The records drew immediate attention on social media and prompted Thomas to address the situation publicly before it spiraled further.
Chilli and the fine print defense
Thomas responded on Instagram, firmly distancing herself from the MAGA label and insisting that the donations were the result of a misunderstanding rather than a political endorsement. She explained that she believed she was contributing to causes focused on combating human trafficking and supporting veterans, two issues she described as deeply personal given her father’s military service and her longstanding advocacy for children.
She acknowledged that she had failed to read the fine print before donating and framed the situation as a lesson learned, asking her followers for grace as she worked through the fallout. The explanation landed with mixed reactions, with some fans accepting her account and others pointing to a broader pattern of online activity that made her clarification harder to take at face value.
A Michelle Obama video and an accidental repost
As scrutiny of Thomas’s social media presence grew, observers surfaced additional concerns beyond the donation records. Among them was a repost of a debunked conspiracy video falsely claiming that former First Lady Michelle Obama had registered to vote as a man in 1994. Fans also noted that Thomas had liked posts connected to Trump and conservative commentator Charlie Kirk and followed several prominent Republican figures online.
Thomas addressed the Obama video in a video statement of her own, calling the repost an accident. She said she had no knowledge that the video had appeared on her page until she began receiving calls and messages from people close to her. Upon checking her account, she said she realized her thumb had accidentally hit the repost button while scrolling, a mistake she attributed in part to her limited comfort with social media navigation.
She was emphatic that the repost did not reflect her views on Obama, pointing to her history of voting for Barack Obama in both of his presidential campaigns and supporting Michelle Obama’s school wellness initiatives as evidence of her genuine respect and affection for the family.
Context and a pattern of controversy
This is not the first time Thomas has navigated public backlash over politically sensitive comments. In 2017, she faced criticism after stating in a television interview that all lives matter when asked about the Black Lives Matter movement, a response that drew a sharp reaction from fans and commentators at the time.
The latest episode arrives at a moment when celebrity political alignments are under unusually intense scrutiny, with fans increasingly willing to dig through donation records, social media archives and past interviews to construct a fuller picture of public figures’ political leanings.
Whether Thomas’s explanations will be enough to fully put the matter to rest remains uncertain. What is clear is that the combination of donation records, a conspiracy video repost and a history of politically charged comments has placed her in a position that a simple Instagram post may not easily resolve. The conversation around her political identity, it seems, is just getting started.

