Donald Trump is reportedly spiraling behind closed doors, with his health in free fall and pressure mounting ahead of a potentially explosive House event focused on Jeffrey Epstein’s victims.
Lev Parnas, a former Trump associate turned critic, didn’t mince words Tuesday night. In an article titled “Trump Is Panicking — Tomorrow Could Break Him,” Parnas paints a damning picture of the president as both physically and psychologically unraveling in anticipation of what’s about to be aired out in Washington.
“His health is failing, his lies are collapsing, and survivors are ready to speak truth to power,” Parnas wrote. According to him, Wednesday’s bipartisan hearing—where ten Epstein survivors are expected to speak—has Trump pacing, sweating, and scrambling for damage control.
“This is going to be one of those days that Donald Trump and his cohorts have been dreading,” Parnas stated. The event, which is being led by both Rep. Ro Khanna (D-CA) and Rep. Thomas Massie (R-KY), is expected to give victims a public platform—one that Parnas says Trump has fought hard behind the scenes to prevent.
“He feels the walls closing in. His health is in steep decline, his mind is racing, and he’s scrambling to hold together a narrative that’s already collapsing under the weight of truth,” Parnas said. “My sources are telling me tonight that Trump is panicking about the survivors who will be speaking. He’s especially terrified of some of the new victims who haven’t testified yet. He knows they’re ready to name names. He knows they’re going to tear apart the fake narrative he and Todd Blanche built out of lies, intimidation, and back-room deals.”
According to Parnas, the push to contain the fallout isn’t just coming from Mar-a-Lago.
“Trump’s allies are doing everything they can to rewrite history before it’s too late,” he wrote, accusing House Oversight Chair James Comer of trying to manage and limit the scope of what comes out.
“As I told you previously, James Comer is inserting himself again, trying to control the scope of subpoenas and testimony released through the House Oversight Committee. He thinks he can bury inconvenient truths and hand Trump a lifeline,” Parnas wrote. “But tomorrow, in a rare bipartisan move, Congressman Ro Khanna and Congressman Thomas Massie will stand together to give victim-survivors the microphone. Their truth will cut through the noise. And we will be amplifying those voices so the world cannot look away.”
For Trump, who’s been out of the public eye for the better part of the past week, the pressure seems to be boiling over. Parnas claims that those close to Trump have been sounding the alarm.
“Sources close to Trump are confirming just how badly he’s been unraveling over all of this. They describe a man who is restless, agitated, and visibly shaken by what’s coming,” he wrote.
Parnas also took a swipe at a recent appearance by Trump that, he says, was a failed attempt to look strong.
“[I]n a desperate attempt to seize back the narrative, Trump tried to force himself into the news cycle — a flimsy ‘proof of life’ moment that only highlighted how far he’s slipped,” Parnas said. “Remember, folks, we hadn’t heard from or seen him in a full week. And what we saw today confirmed everything I’ve been telling you: Trump does not look good.”
The hearing is expected to attract massive media attention—not just for its bipartisan nature, but for what it could reveal about how deep the Epstein network went, and who knew what.
If Parnas is right, Trump’s anxiety may only be just beginning.