A viral post circulating on Facebook has renewed attention on a set of claims by a self-described psychic who says he “predicted” the Covid-19 pandemic and is now warning that 2026 will bring a “downfall” for US President Donald Trump, including what he describes as a mysterious illness and a sudden political reversal.

The post, shared by VT, links to a story about Nicolas Aujula, a London-based hypnotherapist who has previously described himself publicly as having visions of future events. In the latest round of predictions attributed to him, Aujula is described as forecasting a period of upheaval in US politics next year, alongside a broader series of global and UK-focused warnings ranging from extreme weather to major public controversies involving high-profile figures.

According to the account of his remarks, Aujula claims that 2026 will mark a turning point for Trump, with his “downfall” linked not to a single election outcome but to a combination of health concerns and political pressure that would leave him weakened and vulnerable. In one quoted description of what he says he foresees, Aujula said: “I have seen Trump falling ill with a mysterious illness that could possibly be an aneurysm.”

The same account describes Aujula as suggesting that Trump could face a dramatic incident connected to travel, with the report stating he “predicted that he could fall from a plane” and later “may struggle with his mobility.” The claims are presented as predictions rather than as information grounded in any medical diagnosis or official assessment, and they are not supported by evidence beyond Aujula’s stated belief in his own visions.

In his comments, Aujula frames the Trump prediction as part of a wider forecast in which he says prominent political figures will face sudden reversals. He is described as anticipating “civil unrest” and broader political uncertainty, and the report characterises his prediction as a warning that Trump’s position could become unsustainable in the face of events he believes will unfold in 2026.

Aujula’s claims have circulated in tabloid-style online coverage in the past, particularly when he has linked his predictions to major breaking stories. In this case, the renewed interest has been driven by the social media post and the way the prediction is framed as a “chilling warning” for 2026, with the Facebook post itself presenting the story as a negative outlook “for the President.”

The narrative around Aujula’s predictions is built partly on his assertion that he has previously foreseen major events. In the current reporting, he is described as having claimed that he predicted the pandemic and other significant incidents. The report says he “correctly predicted Covid-19,” and also points to claims that he predicted events such as the Black Lives Matter movement and the Notre-Dame Cathedral fire, though those claims are presented as assertions rather than as independently verified proof of foreknowledge.

In addition to the Trump claim, the same reporting attributes a series of further predictions to Aujula that are not directly connected to US politics but are presented as part of a single outlook for 2026. One of the most detailed themes is extreme heat and the social strain it could cause. Aujula is quoted as saying: “I could feel like I was in an oven and could see a hazy orange sun,” in a description linked to his prediction of a record-breaking UK summer.

The report goes on to say he expects the UK’s 2026 summer to be “the hottest” on record, with “heatwaves and droughts” and the possibility of “water rationing.” It also describes him as predicting “more fires” and pressure on infrastructure, aligning the overall claim with a broader theme of climate-driven disruption. While the UK and parts of Europe have experienced increasingly frequent heatwaves in recent years, there is no official forecast that can validate claims of record-setting temperatures a year in advance with certainty, and Aujula’s remarks are framed as a personal prediction rather than a scientific outlook.

Aujula is also described as predicting a major event involving electrical disruption, with the report attributing to him a vision of sparks “flying” and “everything suddenly going dark.” The account does not provide technical detail about the cause, and there is no corroborating evidence offered. The claim is presented as another example of the dramatic imagery Aujula says accompanies his visions.

The coverage also attributes to Aujula predictions touching on celebrity and royal-related controversy. In the account of his remarks, he is described as forecasting a scandal involving Prince Harry and Meghan, with the allegation that it would come from someone close to Meghan. The report says he predicted “a ‘huge scandal’ to do with Meghan Markle” and described it as “something will happen with someone who is close to her.” No specific allegation is provided beyond that framing, and the story does not identify any named individual or concrete claim that could be checked.

The package of predictions further includes claims about public attention to unidentified flying objects, and a suggestion that some form of disclosure or heightened interest will emerge in 2026. These claims, like the others, are presented as forecasts rather than as reporting based on any official statement or evidence that such an event is expected.

Aujula’s profession is referenced repeatedly in the coverage, with the report identifying him as a hypnotherapist based in London, a detail that has featured in past write-ups of his predictions. The reporting does not suggest he holds any official role in government or in scientific forecasting, and the predictions are presented as part of the longstanding cultural genre of psychic forecasts that tend to surge online around year-end and the start of a new year.

The viral spread of the claims reflects how such predictions often circulate, particularly when they are linked to polarising figures or major world events. In this case, the Trump element is central to the online engagement, with the story framed as a warning about a dramatic personal and political decline. The language used in the circulating post and the story it links to emphasises uncertainty and menace, positioning the prediction as a serious warning while offering no verifiable mechanism by which such a future could be known in advance.

For now, Aujula’s statements remain predictions and cannot be verified as fact. The story’s impact lies less in any evidence offered and more in the way it draws attention through specificity, naming a public figure, describing a form of illness, and tying the forecast to a defined year. That combination, amplified through social media sharing, has made the claims highly visible even as they remain fundamentally unprovable until the events of 2026 either occur or do not.

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