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Veteran Democratic strategist James Carville predicted that President Donald Trump will resign by this time next year after the midterm elections. The claim sounds outrageous, but Carville has built the case across multiple videos and podcast episodes, tying it to a specific chain of events: a Democratic sweep in November, a Congress that turns hostile, and a president who, Carville argues, simply will not have the stomach to endure what follows.
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James Carville, long cast as the “Ragin’ Cajun” of Democratic politics, rose to national prominence during the Bill Clinton years. Now 81, he hosts the “Politics War Room” podcast and remains one of the most outspoken voices in Democratic circles. His prediction is not a casual remark. He released a video titled “Trump Will Be Gone, Sooner Than You Think!” saying, “Everything that he tries blows up in his face.” For Carville, this is both a political forecast and a personal conviction.
Carville called for “a staggering, breathtaking, comprehensive and total defeat of Trumpism” in November, telling voters to make clear “how much the American people hates his f***ing guts.” His reasoning goes beyond emotion. He argues that losing Congress means losing power incrementally: lobbyists will cut deals elsewhere, foreign leaders will stop returning calls, and the social world around Trump will shift toward whoever holds the real leverage. The presidency would still be his in name, but little else.
Carville has focused on resignation rather than impeachment, warning listeners to “strike the word ‘impeachment’ from your vocabulary” because it would only keep Trump at the center of national attention. His more specific prediction involves a negotiated exit: investigations by a Democratic-controlled House create enough legal pressure that Trump strikes a deal, resigns, and receives a presidential pardon from Vice President JD Vance, who would then assume the presidency. Carville described Vance as someone who “will do whatever he can to get into the White House.”
The U.S.-Israel joint military strikes on Iran began on February 28, 2026, triggering a surge in gasoline prices and a sharp drop in Trump’s standing. A Marist poll conducted in late April found that 60% of Americans disapprove of how Trump is handling Iran, up from 54% in March, with more than six in ten saying the military action has done more harm than good. Carville has also warned that U.S. actions in Iran could eventually cross into war crimes territory, potentially drawing scrutiny from international courts.
A Reuters/Ipsos poll released in late March showed Trump’s approval at 36%, with only 29% approving of his handling of the economy, the lowest economic rating of either of his two presidential terms and lower than any recorded during Joe Biden’s presidency. The drop is particularly pronounced among groups that helped deliver his 2024 victory: 71% of Hispanic respondents, 70% of independents, and 76% of voters aged 18 to 29 disapprove of his job performance, according to a New York Times poll.
Prediction markets currently give Democrats an approximately 80% chance of winning the House in November, driven by the historical pattern of the president’s party losing seats in midterm elections and by recent generic ballot polling that shows Democrats leading by four to seven points nationally. Carville himself predicted a Republican “wipeout,” telling Fox News that Democrats would pick up “at a minimum 25 seats, maybe as high as 45,” and would likely retake the Senate as well.
Republican disapproval of Trump on cost-of-living issues has risen from 27% to 34%, and disapproval on inflation has jumped from 28% to 40% since mid-February, representing a significant shift within his own base. Congress also came closer than at any prior point to passing a War Powers Resolution that would limit Trump’s authority to continue the Iran conflict, with three Republican senators breaking with their party to vote for the measure. For a president whose strength rests on party loyalty, the erosion is significant.
Trump has rejected the premise entirely. He has told his Cabinet he does not care about the midterms and insists he can outlast Iran in negotiations. His political operation remains formidable in Republican primaries, where his endorsements still carry decisive weight. Trump is currently facing the lowest approval ratings of his second term, but his Republican base still largely supports him, and the White House has given no indication it takes the resignation speculation seriously. Carville’s scenario depends entirely on an election outcome that has not yet occurred.
Carville’s forecast is vivid, detailed, and driven by genuine fury at the Trump administration. He has been described as someone “known for bombastic rhetoric and wild predictions,” and this one fits that description. No president in American history has voluntarily resigned except Richard Nixon, under the direct threat of impeachment conviction. Carville’s scenario requires Trump to lose November, face aggressive investigations, and then choose humiliation over stubbornness — a sequence of events that is possible, but far from certain.
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