The logo features an interlocking blue T and P (for Trump and Pence), with the T going through the white space in the P. | POLITICO Screen grab Trump's campaign logo mocked on Twitter Some said it looked sexually suggestive.

Donald Trump didn't just get Mike Pence as his running mate Friday. He also got a new logo — and the wisecracks started flying on social media.

An email sent by the presumptive Republican nominee's Make America Great Again Committee, the joint fundraising committee between the campaign and the Republican National Committee, features the new insignia: An interlocking blue T and P (for Trump and Pence), with the T going through the white space in the P. To the right are four red stripes and three white stripes, imitating the American flag.


Below the logo is Trump's name, in its usual font and blue color, and Pence's name below in slightly smaller type, and in red.

Twitter lit up with jokes about the interlocking letters looking sexually suggestive. "What is the T doing to that P?" the longtime former Democratic Rep. John Dingell quipped.

From campaign email, here’s the Trump-Pence 2016 logo... pic.twitter.com/elp0qYMM9n — Hunter Schwarz (@hunterschwarz) July 15, 2016

"I am pleased to announce that I have chosen Governor Mike Pence as my Vice Presidential running mate," Trump wrote in the joint fundraising committee's email. "Together we will Make America Great Again! Contribute now to be the first to join the Trump-Pence Team."

What is the T doing to that P? https://t.co/tDvYm2QJYi — John Dingell (@JohnDingell) July 15, 2016





Maybe it’s just me, but this seems very inappropriate for a campaign logo pic.twitter.com/KJfHIuj2Sf — Taegan Goddard (@politicalwire) July 15, 2016









.@realDonaldTrump This took me 5 minutes. Your graphic designers are somehow more incompetent than you. pic.twitter.com/7inPMN4iUF — Michael Deppisch (@deppisch) July 15, 2016

Trump's new logo would hardly be the first to face online mockery. Hillary Clinton's campaign drew a fair amount of criticism on a variety of points when it unveiled its "Forward" logo in April 2015.

“I think the Hillary logo is really saying nothing,” Scott Thomas, the design director for Barack Obama’s 2008 presidential campaign, told POLITICO at the time. “It’s just a red arrow moving to the right.”

When Ohio Gov. John Kasich unveiled his campaign logo last July, it was met with biting critiques on Twitter.

"Typography is dead," tweeted Patrick Ruffini, a digital strategist who ran online efforts for the Bush-Cheney campaign in 2004.

As far as Texas Gov. Rick Perry's logo, a roundel featuring a red "P" with a blue-edged shooting star, Steven Heller, co-chair of the design department at the School of Visual Arts told POLITICO that it was in a class by itself (a remedial design class, perhaps)."

Darren Samuelsohn contributed to this report.