Living Nostradamus’ Trump Warning

Brazilian mystic Athos Salomé, often called the “Living Nostradamus,” has made another prediction about world politics.

This time, his focus is Donald Trump and what may happen in 2026.

Salomé’s predictions should be treated as speculation, not confirmed fact. Still, his warnings have gained attention because they touch on one of the biggest political questions of the year: how much power Trump will keep after the midterm elections.

The 2026 midterms are especially important because Republicans currently control both chambers of Congress. That means any major shift could change Trump’s ability to pass laws and push his agenda forward.

According to Salomé, Trump may face a difficult political year.

He predicts that the president’s popularity could weaken as the Democratic base becomes more energized. He also suggests Republicans could lose at least one chamber of Congress.

That would be a major blow.

A less friendly Congress would make it harder for Trump to move big legislation. It could also force him to rely more heavily on executive orders, agency decisions, and administrative action.

Salomé described that possible governing style as ruling “by pen.”

In other words, Trump may still look powerful in public, but his legal and legislative room could shrink behind the scenes.

The prediction also points to rising tension inside the Republican Party.

Salomé believes Trump will remain the dominant figure in the GOP. But he suggests some Republicans may quietly worry about midterm losses, voter fatigue, and the political cost of staying too close to his agenda.

Trump’s biggest themes, according to the prediction, may include border security, trade disputes, federal bureaucracy, and attacks on what he sees as judicial overreach.

Those issues are already central to his political identity.

But 2026 could test how far that message still reaches.

Recent campaign activity also shows that Democrats are aggressively targeting competitive House seats ahead of the midterms, with the DCCC expanding its “Red to Blue” program in battleground races.

Salomé also made a prediction about Melania Trump.

He believes the first lady will remain mostly discreet, choosing carefully controlled appearances rather than becoming a loud political figure.

In his view, Melania may act more like a quiet symbol of stability than a campaign warrior.

That image fits her usual public style.

She often draws attention through fashion, timing, and rare appearances rather than long political speeches.

The deeper warning in Salomé’s prediction is not about one scandal or one courtroom fight.

It is about power.

If Congress becomes less supportive, Trump may still command headlines. But his ability to govern through normal legislative channels could become weaker.

That could create a strange political picture.

A president who looks dominant.
A party that feels nervous.
A Congress that becomes harder to control.
And a country preparing for another bitter election cycle.

Whether Salomé’s prediction comes true remains to be seen.

But his message is clear: in 2026, Trump’s biggest threat may not be outside the White House.

It may be the slow loss of support inside Washington itself.