The Daily BS • Bo Snerdley Cuts Through It!
The Daily BS • Bo Snerdley Cuts Through It!

Get my Daily BS twice-a-day news stack directly to your email.


Eric Trump will NEVER forget what Dad said to him in all-time ‘bleakest’ moment, after 34 guilty counts

by

Even after a Manhattan jury slapped Donald Trump with 34 felony convictions in the Democrats’ favorite courtroom circus, the future president apparently wasn’t ready to throw in the towel — not even close.

According to Eric Trump, the now-president delivered a calm, almost eerie prediction while the two rode away from the courthouse after the historic verdict: somehow, they were still going to win it all.

“We were driving out of the court. My father had just been convicted … and the two of us are in the car together,” Eric Trump recalled during an appearance on Sean Hannity’s podcast.

“And he looked at me, and he goes, ‘Honey, I don’t know how, but somehow we’re going to win, and somehow we’re going to win this all.’”

At the time, Trump world had every reason to think the walls were closing in. Cable news hosts were practically dancing on desks. Manhattan prosecutors were basking in the glow of a made-for-TV prosecution over bookkeeping entries tied to hush-money allegations involving adult-film actress Stormy Daniels. The anti-Trump resistance declared victory before the confetti even hit the floor.

Instead, the conviction may have done the opposite.

Eric Trump said his father wasn’t just talking about the case itself. The elder Trump, he insisted, was already looking past the courtroom drama and toward reclaiming the White House from Joe Biden after four bruising years.

“He wasn’t just talking about the actual court case … he was also talking about winning the White House back and winning the entire election,” Eric said.

That prediction, once mocked by critics as fantasy, now reads more like political prophecy.

The six-week Manhattan trial became the first criminal prosecution ever brought against a former U.S. president — a milestone critics blasted as an unprecedented weaponization of the justice system against the leading opposition candidate. Trump pleaded not guilty to all 34 counts of falsifying business records tied to payments made during the 2016 campaign.

But while pundits predicted political extinction, Trump transformed the courtroom into a campaign backdrop. Fundraising exploded. Poll numbers hardened. Supporters framed the prosecution as less about justice and more about stopping a political comeback by any means necessary.

Eric Trump called the moment after the verdict one of the bleakest experiences of his life — yet also one of the most revealing.

“He came from such a place of positivity in such an unbelievably low moment,” he said. “I’ll never forget that as long as I live.”

In hindsight, that ride out of the courthouse may have marked less of an ending than the opening scene of one of the wildest political comebacks in modern American history.

1 Comment

  1. Kangaroo courts

Submit a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *