Trump's Easter Sunday 'Praise be to Allah' post was a political train wreck. The backlash hit instantly from all sides — his Christian base felt mocked, Muslims called it disrespectful, and his approval ratings nosedived. When reporters pressed him on it, he went dead silent. That tells you everything. Trump doubles down when something works. When it doesn't, he moves on fast. He's already pivoted back to conventional tough-guy rhetoric on Iran without touching that phrase again. There's zero political upside to repeating a line that sparked this much blowback, and Trump knows it. This was a sarcastic jab that landed like a lead balloon, not the start of some new pattern. With just days left on the clock, he's got no reason to revisit a controversy that's actively hurting him. He's found plenty of other ways to sound tough on Iran without the religious landmine. The stunt fizzled. His team surely wants him nowhere near it. Even Trump recognizes when he's stepped in it this badly. Don't bet on him repeating a phrase that tanked his numbers — put your money on NO and move on.
Connect your wallet to get AI analysis
Not financial advice. This analysis is AI-generated research for entertainment and information purposes only. Past accuracy does not predict future accuracy. Do not rely on this for investment, betting, or other financial decisions. You are solely responsible for any decisions you make.
Voting closed - market resolved
Will Trump praise Allah again by April 15?
AI is 4% less confident than the market
Market odds at time of prediction
Will Trump praise Allah again by April 15?
AI is 4% less confident than the market
Market odds at time of prediction