CELEBRITY
JUST IN: Donald Trump is having a nervous breakdown over failures in Iran. British politician and journalist George Galloway reveals that everyone knows about the US president’s condition — from the military and the cabinet to Vice President J.D. Vance.
**London / Washington, D.C.** — British politician and broadcaster George Galloway has sparked intense online debate by claiming U.S. President Donald Trump is experiencing a “nervous breakdown” amid mounting setbacks in the ongoing U.S.-Iran conflict.
In a widely shared post on X (formerly Twitter) on March 22, 2026, Galloway wrote: “Trump is in the middle of a nervous breakdown. Vance knows it. The Military knows it. The Cabinet knows it. The media knows it. The public knows it. Remove him you fools.”
The statement, which has amassed over 70,000 likes, 15,000 reposts, and more than a million views, comes as the four-week-old military campaign—triggered by U.S. and Israeli strikes including the reported killing of Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei—faces fierce Iranian resistance, missile exchanges, threats to close the Strait of Hormuz, and rising global energy prices.
Galloway, a vocal critic of Western interventions and leader of the Workers Party of Britain, suggested Trump’s inner circle, including Vice President J.D. Vance, military leaders, and cabinet members, are fully aware of the president’s alleged distress but have failed to act.
Galloway has repeatedly addressed the crisis on his program *The Mother of All Talkshows* (MOATS), describing Trump’s strategy as reckless and predicting catastrophic consequences, including potential destruction across the Persian Gulf if escalation continues.
He has also referenced the Rolling Stones song “19th Nervous Breakdown” in posts mocking the administration’s handling of the war.
The White House has not commented directly on Galloway’s claims, which remain unverified and appear rooted in public observations of Trump’s recent statements and demeanor during press briefings.
Critics of the president have pointed to perceived inconsistencies in administration messaging on the conflict, while supporters dismiss the accusations as partisan hyperbole from a longtime opponent of U.S. foreign policy.
The provocative call for Trump’s removal—echoing 25th Amendment discussions in some media circles—has fueled polarized reactions online, with supporters amplifying Galloway’s post as evidence of leadership failure and detractors labeling it inflammatory speculation during a volatile geopolitical moment.
As fighting in the region intensifies, Galloway’s outburst underscores the deepening divisions over the war both domestically and internationally.
