
Judge Orders Trump Campaign to Stop Using Isaac Hayes Song in Campaign Events
A federal judge has issued a preliminary injunction against the Trump campaign, requiring them to stop using Isaac Hayes' song "Hold On, I'm Coming" at campaign events.

Wooden gavel on court desk surface
The ruling, made by Judge Thomas Thrash Jr. in Atlanta, comes after the Isaac Hayes estate filed a lawsuit seeking emergency action to prevent the song's use. While the campaign must cease future use of the song, they are not required to remove videos containing previous uses.
Trump campaign attorney Ronald Coleman stated they won't pursue the matter further: "The campaign has no interest in annoying or hurting anyone. And if the Hayes family feels it hurts or annoys them, that's fine, we're not going to force the issue."
Key details about the case:
- The song "Hold On, I'm Coming" was co-written by Isaac Hayes and David Porter in 1966
- It was performed by the duo Sam & Dave (Sam Moore and Dave Prater)
- The Trump campaign used it as 'outro' music during 2020 and 2024 campaign events
- The Hayes estate claims the campaign lacks proper performance licenses
- The campaign argues they have valid PRO licenses for public performance
- The Hayes estate says they removed these rights through a BMI political exclusion
Isaac Hayes III expressed satisfaction with the ruling, stating: "I want this to serve as an opportunity for other artists to come forward that don't want their music used by Donald Trump or other political entities."

Classical columns with historic building backdrop

Isaac Hayes with Grammy award
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