Speculation is exploding – and JD Vance is suddenly on the ropes
Once framed as Trump’s natural successor, his 2028 odds are sliding, prediction markets are whiplashing, and critics with massive platforms are
lining up to take their shots. As Trump’s era ticks toward its constitutional end, Republicans are quietly panicking over who truly comes ne… Continues…
As Trump’s second and final term looms over Washington, the question of “What comes after?”
is no longer hypothetical. For a brief moment, JD Vance looked like the obvious answer: a loyal vice president, a populist storyteller, a bridge between Trump’s
base and the next generation. Markets once gave him better than a 30 percent shot at the presidency. That number has been cut nearly in half.
Every new fluctuation on PredictIt or Kalshi now feels less like noise and more like a warning: nothing about the post-Trump GOP is settled.
The attacks aren’t just numerical; they’re cultural. Joe Rogan’s blistering dismissal of MAGA voters as “dorks” landed like a punch,
challenging the movement’s self-image. Vance’s response — defending his supporters with a mix of humor and loyalty —
hinted at his political instinct, but also at the fragility of his moment. Behind the polls and soundbites lies a harsher truth:
Trump’s shadow is long, and anyone who hopes to step out of it will have to survive not just the markets, but a country still deciding what it wants to be after him.