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Craig Hamilton‑Parker, the self-styled New Nostradamus and self-proclaimed Prophet of Doom, has predicted that Donald Trump will secure a third term as US president in 2026, bypassing the constitutional limit set by the 22nd Amendment. The British psychic, who has 235,000 YouTube subscribers, issued the warning amid rising global tensions, claiming that world chaos will alter established rules. Speaking from his Southampton base on March 17, 2026, Hamilton‑Parker linked the prediction to potential conflicts that could prompt the use of emergency powers.

Hamilton‑Parker has built a following by citing hits on past predictions, from Brexit and Trump's 2016 victory to Queen Elizabeth II's death and the Covid outbreak. Not all forecasts were accurate, as early bets on Jeb Bush winning the White House and a post-Brexit economic boom for sterling failed, prompting sceptics to label his record a cherry-picked lucky dip. His recent prediction of strikes on Iran's nuclear sites appears to have been borne out, with reports confirming attacks this month, adding weight to his latest vision presented in detailed videos where he and his wife Jane examine ancient Indian Naadi astrology leaves for glimpses of doom.

New Nostradamus Pins Trump's Third Term on Global Mayhem

Hamilton‑Parker's Trump prophecy is not idle speculation but stems from what he views as an inevitable clash, potentially sparked in Taiwan or any global hotspot. He told viewers that a major conflict, possibly involving Taiwan, could unfold, dismissing constitutional critics with a shrug. He added that while many argue a third term is barred by the Constitution, the rapidly changing world leaves outcomes uncertain.

The 22nd Amendment to the US Constitution is unequivocal that no person may be elected president more than twice. Trump, inaugurated for his second term in January 2025 after last November's election, has just over two years left in office. Yet the self‑styled mystic scoffs at legal technicalities, pointing to supposed wildcards such as talk of invading Greenland or the reported abduction of Venezuela's leader as evidence that the old playbook is obsolete. He said that 'who would have imagined the possibility of invading Greenland, or kidnapping a country's leader, as has happened in Venezuela? The world is changing rapidly,' and believes 2026 could unleash a crisis large enough to trigger emergency powers and overshadow term limits.

Sceptics remain unconvinced, and with reason. Hamilton‑Parker's record combines hits with misses; his Brexit prediction arrived years late, and the touted UK economic boom has yet to materialise, with Keir Starmer now strengthening ties with Brussels.

Yet in a year marked by Iran tensions and Middle East unrest, his warnings resonate with an unsettling timbre. Trump's own past remarks that 'there are methods which you could do it' have added fuel to speculation about possible loopholes through vice‑presidential manoeuvres or rushed amendments in Congress. Hamilton‑Parker does not explain the mechanics, only the timing: a crisis triggers the switch and Trump takes the wheel once more.

Chilling 2026 Playbook Beyond the White House

Hamilton‑Parker's crystal ball predicts further gloom for the year ahead, mixing wars, disasters and power shifts that are already partially unfolding. He claims NATO will falter, clearing the path for a new global enforcer by 2030, while Japan may suffer under a mysterious gas cloud in August and financial tremors unsettle markets. All of this, he maintains, comes from his Naadi readings, the ancient Indian palm-leaf scripts said to chart the fates of souls. He and his wife Jane pore over them like prospectors, cross-referencing visions of cataclysms far beyond ordinary conflicts.

Take Iran, for example. Months ago he predicted strikes on military and nuclear sites, now unfolding with precise hits and no boots on the ground. He said phase two, aimed at leaders and bunkers to leave Iranians to manage the fallout, would occur in March 2026. His royal predictions also grab attention — Queen Elizabeth's death and Charles facing cancer — while February 2026 casts a shadow over the throne with arrest rumours circulating.

Trump's extra term could prove explosive in a world already on edge. Parker acknowledges the future is fluid, noting that 'Nadi teachings stress that the future can be changed,' and urges prayers to soften the impact. Yet as missiles strike and alliances unravel, his warnings carry an unsettling resonance. Dismissing him as a YouTube sensationalist seems too simple when current events echo his predictions. If 2026 brings the crises he foresees, his words will be revisited with alarm, leaving the Prophet's claims pitted against the Constitution and the world's mounting tensions.