Conservative strategist and co-founder of the Lincoln Project Rick Wilson laid out what a post-Trump world may look like, and what revelations would follow, in a column published Wednesday.
“When Donald Trump dies, the myth will begin to decay almost instantly; his cult will keep the flame alive for a while, but the records will outlive the rally faithful,” Wilson wrote on his Substack “Against All Enemies."
“History will not remember him as a king, or a savior. History will remember
him as a small, ugly, sick man who happened to seize great power, who wielded
it recklessly, and who left behind a trail of destruction, corruption and
cowardice unmatched in American history.”
Sticking with Trump’s health, Wilson predicted that following Trump’s passing,
a trove of documents related to his physical and mental condition would be
unearthed, documents that would reveal that his “cardiac and mental decline was
charted in careful, hidden memos.”
Wilson also anticipated that revelations around the president’s ties with
Jeffrey Epstein – the convicted sex offender who died in 2019 awaiting trial on
sex-trafficking charges – would come to light and made several startling
predictions about who in Trump’s cabinet may be held to account for potentially
covering up those ties.
“Epstein’s web of power, blackmail, and sexual exploitation reached deep into
America’s elite, and we’ll learn Trump was in the thick of it,” Wilson wrote.
“The [Justice Department’s] illegal Epstein coverup and corrupt pardon of
Ghislaine Maxwell will unravel, and by the end, [Attorney General] Pam Bondi,
[Deputy Attorney General] Todd Blanche, [FBI Director] Kash Patel, and [FBI
Deputy Director] Dan Bongino will be in prison.”
Details on Trump’s business dealings, many of which have enriched the president
to the tune of billions of dollars, would also be laid to bare following his
passing, Wilson noted, details that he argued history would not look well upon.
“The Trumpcoin scams, the garbage social media platform, the grifty deals with
foreign powers, the bribes for pardons…all of it will be seen for what it is; a
criminal enterprise, a mobster bust out of an entire nation,” Wilson wrote.
“History will learn about the shell companies, the overseas accounts, the
backroom deals where American policy was auctioned off like a Mar-a-Lago dinner
table.”
Ultimately, Wilson argued that through the wave of revelations following the
president’s passing, a clear picture of Trump would be painted: that of someone
whose “only interest was control.”
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