Kristen Stewart Says She Can No Longer Work Freely in the U.S. Under Trump

Kristen Stewart has finally had enough. The Twilight icon says Donald Trump’s proposed film tariffs have pushed her to a breaking point, forcing her to flee American sets and shoot her first movie in Latvia. She warns reality is “breaking,” her freedom to work is vanishing, and her future in the U.S. is no longer cert… Continues…

 

Kristen Stewart’s decision to shoot The Chronology of Water in Latvia instead of the United States is more than a logistical choice; it’s a quiet act of protest. She describes Trump’s floated tariffs on foreign-made films as “terrifying,” not just for their economic impact but for the chilling effect they cast over creative risk. For her, the uncertainty alone is enough to make independent filmmaking at home feel “impossible.”

 

Now balancing her life between Los Angeles and New York, Stewart admits she may not stay in the U.S. if the climate continues to harden. She doesn’t want to abandon American audiences, but she increasingly sees Europe as the only place she can create without looking over her shoulder. The irony is sharp: an American actress, shaped by Hollywood, feeling pushed abroad by an American president who once tweeted about her love life and now, she believes, threatens her work.