First James Cameron, Now Kristen Stewart: Why Top Celebrities are Abandoning the U.S. in 2026

First James Cameron, Now Kristen Stewart: Why Top Celebrities are Abandoning the U.S. in 2026
Screenshot from @stewartdiaries, via Instagram.com. Used under fair use for editorial commentary.

Before she was an Oscar nominee or a burgeoning director, Kristen Stewart was a frequent flyer in Donald Trump’s Twitter mentions. Back in 2012, long before the golden elevators and the second term, the future president was famously preoccupied with Stewart’s dating life, posting a staggering 11 times about her high-profile breakup with Robert Pattinson.

Now, fourteen years after being told she “cheated like a dog,” Stewart is responding with a radical detachment of her own. In a candid recent interview with The Times of London, the actress-turned-director revealed she will “probably not” stay in the United States, citing a creative environment that has become stifling under the current administration.

“Reality is breaking completely under Trump,” Stewart told the outlet, noting that she can no longer “work freely” in her home country. But for Stewart, this isn’t just about political fatigue; it’s about the survival of the independent film.

First James Cameron, Now Kristen Stewart: Why Top Celebrities are Abandoning the U.S. in 2026
Screenshot from Kristen Stewart’s official Instagram, via Instagram.com. Used under fair use for editorial commentary.

The Latvian Pivot

Stewart’s directorial debut, The Chronology of Water, which premiered at the Cannes Film Festival in May 2025, serves as the blueprint for her new international strategy. While most Hollywood heavyweights fight for Los Angeles soundstages, Stewart fled to Latvia to film her adaptation of Lidia Yuknavitch’s memoir.

The choice was tactical. Stewart has described the American film industry as a “capitalist hell” that creates “unbelievable barriers” for marginalized voices. By shooting in the fledgling film culture of the Baltics, she found the “radical detachment” necessary to create. But the move also feels like a pre-emptive strike against a changing domestic landscape.

First James Cameron, Now Kristen Stewart: Why Top Celebrities are Abandoning the U.S. in 2026
Screenshot from @obrotherdistribution, via Instagram.com. Used under fair use for editorial commentary.

In September 2025, President Trump proposed a 100% tariff on any films produced outside the United States, a move he claimed would stop the industry from being “stolen” by other countries. For an artist like Stewart, who argues that making movies shouldn’t be a “Marxist struggle,” the policy is more than a trade hurdle; it’s a creative dead end.

A Growing “Exile” Club

Stewart is hardly the only A-lister packing a suitcase for “sanity over scenery.” She joins a growing list of industry titans who have decided that the American dream is currently better served abroad:

James Cameron: The Avatar mastermind recently confirmed he is permanently relocating to New Zealand. “I’m not there for scenery, I’m there for the sanity,” Cameron said on a recent podcast, contrasting New Zealand’s science-led pandemic response with a U.S. culture he described as “extremely polarized” and “at each other’s throats.

Ellen DeGeneres: The former talk-show host moved to the English Cotswolds in late 2024, telling fans the election was the primary catalyst and that she is “never coming back”.

First James Cameron, Now Kristen Stewart Why Top Celebrities are Abandoning the U (1)
Screenshots from James Cameron’s official page, @andweknowofficial, @quiencom, via Instagram.com. Used under fair use for editorial commentary.

Rosie O’Donnell: Long a target of Trump’s public ire, O’Donnell has moved to Ireland with her youngest child, citing safety concerns and a desire for a “peaceful life” in a self-imposed exile.

Shoving Art “Down Their Throats”

What distinguishes Stewart’s exit is her lack of quiet resignation. While others seek the rolling hills of the UK or the quiet fjords of New Zealand, Stewart’s move feels like a tactical relocation of her armory.
“I don’t want to give up completely,” she told The Times. “I’d like to make movies in Europe and then shove them down the throat of the American people.”

It’s a defiant stance that brings her history with Trump full circle. In 2017, while hosting Saturday Night Live, Stewart famously quipped that Trump’s obsession with her relationship likely meant he didn’t like her, but she was “so gay, dude.” Today, the “obsessive” tweets of the past have been replaced by federal policies that target the very way she makes art.

For the actress who spent her twenties under the most intense tabloid microscope in the world, “breaking reality” isn’t a new concept. But by moving her camera to Europe, she isn’t just escaping a headline; she’s attempting to build a new reality where the work can finally speak louder than the noise.