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Introduction
Let’s talk about something that affects nearly a third of all older adults but rarely makes it into polite dinner conversation: bowel movements. Specifically, how often should you be having them, what happens when you don’t, and what can you do about it. This isn’t exactly cocktail party material, but it matters, a lot, for your comfort, your health, and your overall quality of life.
Constipation is extraordinarily common in people over 60. Some estimates put the rate of chronic constipation as high as 30% in community-dwelling older adults, and it climbs up to 50% among nursing home residents. Yet it remains under-discussed, under-treated, and frequently dismissed as just a normal part of getting older. Spoiler alert: it isn’t.
What Is a “Normal” Bowel Movement Schedule for Seniors?
Here’s a liberating fact: there is no single right answer to how often you should go. The notion that everyone should have a bowel movement every day is a myth. The accepted medical range for normal stool frequency is anywhere from three times a day to three times a week. If you’re comfortable, there’s no straining, and nothing has dramatically changed from your usual pattern, you’re probably fine.
For most seniors, having a bowel movement once a day to three times a week falls within the typical range. The key phrase here is “typical for you.” What matters clinically is consistency and comfort, not hitting some magic daily number.
A large National Health Interview Survey of over 42,000 participants found something that surprises many people: infrequent bowel movements don’t automatically increase with age the way conventional wisdom has long assumed. As the researchers noted in the Annals of Internal Medicine, a decline in bowel movement frequency is “not an invariable concomitant of aging.”
So what does change with age? The colon can slow its transit time — the speed at which food waste travels from one end to the other. Muscle tone in the abdomen and pelvic floor may decrease. Nerve sensitivity in the rectum can diminish, meaning you may not feel the urge to go as acutely as you once did. Add reduced physical activity, inadequate fluid intake, and a roster of medications, and you have a recipe for sluggishness down below.
Harvard Health recommends paying attention to any dramatic departure from what’s normal for you. If you typically go once a day and suddenly you’re going once a week without an obvious explanation like a change in diet or travel, that’s worth discussing with your doctor. Especially if it comes with fatigue, pain, unintentional weight loss, blood in the stool, or a change in consistency.
The Downside of Infrequent Bowel Movements
Constipation might seem like just an inconvenience, but when it becomes chronic or severe, the consequences can be surprisingly serious. Here’s a rundown of what can go wrong.
Fecal Impaction
The most dangerous complication of untreated chronic constipation is fecal impaction — when hardened stool becomes lodged in the colon or rectum and simply cannot pass. This is a genuine medical emergency. In the UK, fecal impaction has been identified in about 40% of hospitalized older patients. What makes it particularly tricky is that it can masquerade as diarrhea: liquid stool from above the blockage leaks around the impaction, creating what’s called overflow incontinence. If left untreated, impaction can cause intestinal obstruction, ulceration of the bowel wall, and even perforation and these can be life-threatening.
Hemorrhoids and Anal Fissures
Chronic straining on the toilet puts enormous pressure on the veins around the rectum, which can produce hemorrhoids — swollen, painful, and sometimes bleeding. Hard stools can also cause small tears called anal fissures, which are painful and can bleed with each bowel movement. These aren’t just uncomfortable; they can signal that something needs to change.
Quality of Life
Don’t underestimate how much chronic constipation chips away at daily life. Studies using validated quality-of-life instruments have consistently found that constipated older adults score lower on measures of physical functioning, mental health, general health perception, and management of bodily pain. Some studies even found improvements in mood and depression once constipation was successfully treated. This is not a trivial problem.
Confusion and Cognitive Effects
In older adults, particularly those with dementia, unresolved constipation can contribute to confusion, agitation, and behavioral changes. Clinicians who work in geriatrics are trained to consider constipation when an older patient with cognitive impairment suddenly becomes more agitated or confused. It’s one of those connections that surprises non-clinicians but is well recognized in eldercare.
A Note on Red Flags
It bears repeating, new, unexplained constipation, especially in an older adult who hasn’t had it before, deserves medical evaluation. Colon cancer, among other serious conditions, can present as a change in bowel habits. Blood in the stool, unexplained weight loss, iron-deficiency anemia, or a family history of colorectal cancer are all signals to see your doctor promptly rather than reaching for a laxative.
Non-Pharmacological Approaches
Good news: there’s a lot you can do before opening the medicine cabinet. Lifestyle measures are always considered first-line therapy, and for many people, they’re enough.
Fiber Intake
Dietary fiber is the single most important nutritional factor in maintaining regular bowel movements. Fiber adds bulk to stool and helps it move through the colon more efficiently. Whole grains, fresh fruits, vegetables, legumes, dried fruits like prunes, figs, and apricots are all solid choices. Prune juice, in particular, contains sorbitol, a natural sugar that acts as a mild laxative (but I have to admit, it’s not my favorite). Some healthcare providers recommend a simple homemade mixture of equal parts prune juice, chopped prunes, applesauce, and wheat bran, starting with one tablespoon a day and working up to four (again, not my go-to breakfast).
One caution: add fiber gradually. Ramping up too fast can cause bloating and gas, which discourages people from sticking with it. Slow and steady works better here.
Hydration
Without adequate fluid, stool dries out and becomes harder to pass. Mayo Clinic recommends 8 to 10 eight-ounce glasses of non-caffeinated fluids daily. This is especially important if you’re taking a fiber supplement, which needs water to do its job properly. Admittedly, this can be a real challenge for some people.
Physical Activity
Exercise stimulates the gut. Even light walking helps move things along, and the CDC recommends that seniors aim for about 30 minutes of cardiovascular exercise on most days, with a mix of muscle and bone-strengthening activities. The Nurses’ Health Study, which followed over 62,000 women, found that physical activity two to six times per week was associated with a 35% lower risk of constipation.
Scheduled Toileting
Taking advantage of the body’s natural gastrocolic reflex — the wave of colonic contractions triggered by eating — is a simple but effective strategy. Sitting on the toilet 15 to 30 minutes after a meal, particularly breakfast, can help train the bowel to move on a regular schedule. This is one of the most underutilized, zero-cost interventions in geriatric care.
Toilet Positioning
A simple footstool placed under the feet while on the toilet can make a meaningful difference. Raising the knees above hip level — mimicking a squatting position — straightens the angle between the rectum and the anus, making stool easier to pass. Some patients find this makes a real difference in comfort and completeness of evacuation.
Privacy and Routine
This one sounds almost too simple, but it matters: many older adults, particularly those in assisted living or with mobility limitations, feel rushed, embarrassed, or lack adequate privacy when trying to have a bowel movement. Stress and anxiety directly suppress gut motility. Ensuring that someone has enough time, privacy, and a comfortable setting is a legitimate therapeutic intervention, especially in care facility settings.
Biofeedback Therapy
For seniors whose constipation stems from difficulty coordinating the pelvic floor muscles — a condition called dyssynergic defecation — biofeedback therapy can be a game-changer. It uses electronic sensors and visual or auditory feedback to help patients learn to relax the correct muscles during a bowel movement. It’s non-invasive, has no side effects, and is particularly well-suited for people whose constipation hasn’t responded to diet and laxatives.
Pharmacological Approaches
When lifestyle changes aren’t enough and sometimes, they’re not, a range of medications are available, from gentle over-the-counter options to prescription treatments for stubborn cases. Here’s how they generally stack up, from mildest to strongest.
Fiber Supplements (Bulk-Forming Agents)
Products like psyllium (Metamucil), methylcellulose (Citrucel), and polycarbophil (FiberCon) work by absorbing water and adding bulk to stool, making it easier to pass. They’re generally safe for long-term use and are typically the first pharmaceutical step. The key is taking them with plenty of water; without adequate fluid, they can worsen constipation.
Stool Softeners
Docusate sodium (Colace) works by allowing water and fats to penetrate the stool, making it softer and easier to pass. It’s commonly used in post-surgical patients or anyone who needs to avoid straining — for example, after a heart attack or hemorrhoid surgery. It’s gentle and generally well tolerated, though evidence for its effectiveness as a standalone constipation treatment is modest.
Osmotic Laxatives
Polyethylene glycol — sold as MiraLAX — is widely considered the preferred osmotic laxative for older adults. It works by drawing water into the colon, softening the stool and stimulating movement. It’s tasteless, mixes easily into beverages, and has a favorable safety profile compared to alternatives like lactulose (which can cause bloating and gas) or magnesium-based products (which should be used cautiously in people with kidney disease). Daily use of PEG is considered safe and is quite common in geriatric practice. This is my personal option.
Milk of Magnesia (magnesium hydroxide) is another osmotic option that works well for many people, but should be used cautiously in anyone with impaired kidney function, as magnesium can accumulate and cause toxicity.
Stimulant Laxatives
Bisacodyl (Dulcolax) and senna (Senokot) work by stimulating nerve endings in the colon wall, triggering muscle contractions that push stool along. They’re effective but generally recommended for short-term use rather than daily reliance, due to concerns about dependency and potential effects on colon muscle function over time — though evidence on long-term harm is less alarming than once believed.
Suppositories and Enemas
For more immediate relief — or when oral treatments haven’t worked — glycerin or bisacodyl suppositories can sometimes trigger a bowel movement within minutes. Warm water or mineral oil enemas are typically reserved for fecal impaction. These are short-term rescue measures rather than ongoing management tools and should only be used with medical supervision.
Prescription Medications
For seniors with chronic constipation that doesn’t respond to over-the-counter options, several prescription medications have been approved. Linaclotide (Linzess) increases intestinal fluid secretion and gut motility; studies have included patients up to age 86 and demonstrated increased bowel movement frequency. Lubiprostone (Amitiza) works similarly. For patients on opioid pain medications whose constipation is directly caused by those drugs, a class of medications called peripherally acting mu-opioid antagonists — including methylnaltrexone (Relistor) and naloxegol (Movantik) — can counteract the constipating effects of opioids without reducing their pain-relieving benefits.
A Note on Medications That Cause Constipation
It’s worth pausing here to note that many medications commonly prescribed to older adults are themselves a major cause of constipation. Opioid pain medications are the biggest culprits, but the list also includes calcium channel blockers (used for blood pressure and heart conditions), certain antidepressants, antipsychotics, antihistamines, iron supplements, and some antihypertensives. If constipation is a new or worsening problem, a medication review with your doctor is one of the most productive first steps.
The Bottom Line (Sorry about the pun)
Bowel health in older adults is more nuanced than many people realize. “Normal” varies from person to person, and the goal isn’t to hit a daily number on a checklist — it’s to maintain whatever is comfortable and consistent for you, without pain or straining. When that starts to slip, you should take it seriously rather than dismissing it as just part of getting older.
The hierarchy of treatment is straightforward: start with lifestyle — fiber, fluids, exercise, and toileting routine. If that’s not enough, move to gentle over-the-counter options like fiber supplements and MiraLAX. If those don’t work, a physician can guide more targeted approaches, including prescription medications or biofeedback therapy.
And always, always tell your doctor about changes in your bowel habits — especially if they come with blood, pain, or weight loss. Your gut has a lot to say, and it’s worth listening.
Illustration generated by author using ChatGPT.
Sources
· PubMed / Annals of Internal Medicine — Bowel habit in relation to age and gender (National Health Interview Survey, 42,375 subjects) https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/8572842/
· Mayo Clinic Community Health — Bowel habits as you age https://communityhealth.mayoclinic.org/featured-stories/bowel-habits-aging
· Harvard Health — Staying Regular https://www.health.harvard.edu/healthy-aging-and-longevity/staying-regular
· National Institute on Aging (NIH) — Concerned About Constipation? https://www.nia.nih.gov/health/constipation/concerned-about-constipation
· PubMed Central — Chronic Constipation in the Elderly Patient: Updates in Evaluation and Management https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC7272371/
· PubMed Central — Update on the Management of Constipation in the Elderly: New Treatment Options https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC2920196/
· PubMed Central — Constipation in Older Adults: Stepwise Approach to Keep Things Moving https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC4325863/
· HealthInAging.org — Caregiver Guide: Constipation Problems https://www.healthinaging.org/tools-and-tips/caregiver-guide-constipation-problems
· American Academy of Family Physicians (AAFP) — Management of Constipation in Older Adults (2015) https://www.aafp.org/pubs/afp/issues/2015/0915/p500.html
· American Academy of Family Physicians (AAFP) — Treatment of Constipation in Older Adults (2005) https://www.aafp.org/pubs/afp/issues/2005/1201/p2277.html
· Better Health While Aging — Constipation Treatment & Best Laxatives in Aging https://betterhealthwhileaging.net/how-to-prevent-and-treat-constipation-aging/
· Medical Daily — Chronic Constipation in Seniors: Complete Guide to Causes, Risks, and Safe Treatment Options https://www.medicaldaily.com/chronic-constipation-seniors-complete-guide-causes-risks-safe-treatment-options-474499
Illustration generated by author using ChatGPT
Medical Disclaimer
The information provided in this article is intended for general educational and informational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice. It should not be used as a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment.
Always seek the guidance of a qualified healthcare provider with any questions you may have regarding a medical condition or treatment. Never disregard professional medical advice or delay seeking it because of something you have read here.
If you are experiencing a medical emergency, call 911 or your local emergency number immediately.
The author of this article is a licensed physician, but the views expressed here are solely those of the author and do not represent the official position of any hospital, health system, or medical organization with which the author may be affiliated.












The Persecution Brand: How Trump Turns Grievance Into Political Currency
By John Turley
On May 14, 2026
In Commentary, Politics
“They’re not after me, they’re after you. I’m just in the way.” —Donald J. Trump
Introduction
Donald Trump has turned political victimhood into something remarkably durable: a brand. Since his first term, Trump has consistently advanced a narrative that he is the unfair target of a corrupt establishment — not because of anything he has done, but because of who he is and the threat he poses to entrenched power. That narrative, far from fading, has deepened and accelerated in his second term, propelled by a relentless series of legal maneuvers, institutional confrontations, and rhetorical provocations that seem engineered to keep the grievance machine running. Whether the cause is a leaked tax return, a photograph of seashells on a beach, or a comedian’s joke at a press dinner, Trump and his allies have shown a remarkable ability to recast every controversy as evidence of persecution. The result is a political identity built less on policy than on shared victimhood — one that has proven more resilient to contradiction than almost anything else in modern American politics. I first wrote about this several months ago, but recent events have motivated me to update the topic.
The Anatomy of a Persecution Story
At the heart of Trump’s messaging is the claim that nearly every major American institution is rigged against him: the judiciary, the press, federal agencies, social media companies, and even fellow Republicans who fail to show sufficient loyalty. He doesn’t stop at personal grievance. His signature rhetorical move is to project that persecution outward — to his supporters — insisting that the forces targeting him are really targeting them, and that he alone stands in the way. Strongmen throughout history have used this populist inversion to build fierce loyalty, but Trump has refined it for the digital age, where every legal setback can be instantly monetized through fundraising appeals and turned into rally fodder before the ink is dry on a court filing.
Suing His Own Government: The IRS Lawsuit
Few episodes illustrate the paradox of Trump’s persecution narrative more sharply than his $10 billion lawsuit against the IRS and Treasury Department, agencies he controls as president. Filed in January 2026, the suit alleges that a government contractor wrongfully leaked his tax records to the press during his first term — a legitimate grievance in isolation, since the contractor did plead guilty and was sentenced to five years in prison. But the spectacle of a sitting president suing his own executive branch for a payout that would come from taxpayers has raised serious legal and ethical flags. Florida District Judge Kathleen M. Williams questioned whether Trump and the agencies are “sufficiently adverse to each other” for the case to proceed at all, noting that Trump’s own executive orders require the Justice Department to follow his legal interpretations. In plain terms: the president would be suing the government he runs, defended by lawyers who must take his side, with any settlement check written to him by American taxpayers. Trump’s lawyers and the IRS have meanwhile entered settlement talks, requesting a 90-day pause in proceedings. Democratic lawmakers introduced a bill to prohibit the president, vice president, and their families from collecting any such settlement. The episode is vintage Trump — a genuine underlying grievance amplified into a high-profile conflict that simultaneously reinforces his victimhood and generates favorable headlines.
The Pursuit of James Comey: Retribution as Policy
The Trump Justice Department’s second criminal indictment of former FBI Director James Comey, announced April 28, 2026, reads like a case study in how prosecution can become an instrument of political narrative. The charges stem from an Instagram post Comey made in May 2025 showing seashells on a beach arranged to spell “86 47” — a formation Comey said he simply found and photographed. Prosecutors interpreted it as a threat against the 47th president, an argument that First Amendment scholars have called legally dubious. Stanford First Amendment expert Eugene Volokh told CNN: “This is not going anywhere. This is clearly not a punishable threat.” The indictment is the second attempt to prosecute Comey; the first, built on allegations that he lied to Congress, collapsed when a judge ruled that the prosecutor handling the case had been unlawfully appointed. Trump had publicly urged then-Attorney General Pam Bondi to move against Comey, and Bondi was fired in April 2026 after reports that the president was frustrated that she wasn’t pursuing his critics aggressively enough. Her successor, Todd Blanche — Trump’s own former personal defense attorney — moved quickly. The pattern is hard to miss: an allegation, a prosecution, a dismissal, another allegation, a second prosecution. Whether or not the charges succeed, the process itself delivers the message Trump wants delivered.
Perhaps his fear of seashells has caused him to forget that he posted a picture of then President Biden bound and gagged on the back of a pickup truck. Certainly, that was more of a threat than someone’s beachside graffiti, yet Trump was not prosecuted. I wonder why.
The Ballroom and the Bullet: Security as Metaphor
On the evening of April 25, 2026, shots were fired near the security screening area outside the White House Correspondents’ Dinner at the Washington Hilton, where Trump was attending his first such dinner as a sitting president. The suspect, identified as Cole Tomas Allen, was arrested; no attendees inside the ballroom were struck. It was, by any measure, a frightening episode, and the third reported attempt on Trump’s life. What followed, however, quickly illustrated Trump’s talent for turning crisis into confirmation of his narrative. Within two minutes of beginning his press briefing that night, Trump pivoted to arguing that the incident proved the wisdom of his plan to build a new ballroom on White House grounds — a project historic preservationists have challenged in court as unlawful. His administration immediately pressured the National Trust for Historic Preservation to drop its lawsuit, with the acting attorney general writing that the preservation group’s case “cannot possibly justify delaying the construction of a secure facility for the President.” Critics pointed out that Trump’s own administration had given the Correspondents’ Dinner a lower security classification than other events he attends — a detail that complicated his argument. But in Trump’s telling, the shooting was simply the latest proof that enemies lurk everywhere and that his foresight is perpetually vindicated.
The Widow Joke: Melania, Kimmel, and the Media Enemy
Two days before the Correspondents’ Dinner shooting, comedian Jimmy Kimmel delivered a mock roast on his late-night program that included the line: “Look at Melania, so beautiful. Mrs. Trump, you have a glow like an expectant widow.” Kimmel later said it was an obvious joke about the couple’s age difference. The timing — the joke aired before the attempted shooting — became fuel for a firestorm after the incident. First Lady Melania Trump, called on ABC to “take a stand” against Kimmel and President Trump wrote on social media that Kimmel should be “immediately fired by Disney and ABC,” calling his comments “beyond the pale.” FCC Chair Brendan Carr had previously threatened ABC affiliates over Kimmel’s coverage of an earlier controversy. Kimmel pushed back on his Monday night broadcast, calling the joke a “light roast” and denying any connection to the shooting, but the episode had already served its purpose in the persecution playbook: a comedian’s punchline reframed as an incitement; the president and first lady as targets of a corrupt, hostile media; and a federal regulator positioned to remind a broadcast network of who holds the license.
The Nobel Grievance: Peace Prize as Persecution
Trump’s relationship with the Nobel Peace Prize offers perhaps the purest distillation of his persecution aesthetic: a prestigious honor he was not given becomes evidence of institutional bias against him. In January 2026, Trump sent a text message to Norwegian Prime Minister Jonas Gahr Støre that, as reported by PBS and confirmed by Norwegian officials, declared: “Considering your Country decided not to give me the Nobel Peace Prize for having stopped 8 Wars PLUS, I no longer feel an obligation to think purely of Peace.” The message was sent in the context of Trump’s threats to acquire Greenland by force and his tariff pressure on Norway. The factual problems were substantial. PolitiFact reported that the prize is awarded by an independent Norwegian committee, not the Norwegian government — a distinction Støre himself spelled out in a public statement — and Trump’s claim to have “stopped 8 wars” was not supported by evidence. The Nobel Committee separately clarified that a medal gifted to Trump by Venezuelan opposition leader María Corina Machado did not legally transfer the prize to him. None of these corrections appeared to land with Trump’s base, for whom the image of a deserving president snubbed by a foreign establishment is emotionally resonant regardless of the technical details or even the truth.
THE BOARD OF PEACE: TRUMP’S PERSONAL PEACE PRIZE
The Board of Peace offers perhaps the most grandiose expression of Trump’s persecution narrative — not a complaint about being snubbed, but an institutional response to it. When Trump texted Norway’s prime minister in January 2026 linking his Greenland threats to the Nobel Committee’s failure to award him the prize, he was voicing a grievance he had already begun to act on. The Board of Peace, formally established at the World Economic Forum in Davos that same month, designated Trump as chairman for life — an arrangement that inverts the Nobel dynamic entirely: rather than waiting for an independent body to recognize his peacemaking, Trump created his own institution where recognition is structural and permanent. On the anniversary of his inauguration, Trump cited the United Nations never having helped him as a justification for the Board’s existence, suggesting it might eventually replace the UN altogether. The persecution logic runs cleanly through both episodes: the institutions that should have honored him failed him, so he built alternatives he controls. That no other G7 nation joined the Board, including Norway — the very country Trump blamed for the Nobel snub — will almost certainly be absorbed into the same narrative as further proof of establishment resistance to a leader they refuse to recognize.
Why the Narrative Works
Trump’s persecution story endures because it performs several functions simultaneously. It flips accountability into loyalty — every legal charge or critical headline becomes not evidence of wrongdoing but proof of how threatening Trump is to the establishment. It mirrors the genuine anxieties of his base, many of whom feel overlooked by media and government institutions. And it delegitimizes opposition before opposition can speak — if the system is rigged, then any ruling, verdict, or investigation against Trump is by definition corrupt. The narrative also has deep theological resonance for evangelical supporters who see Trump’s legal and political battles as a form of spiritual warfare, reinforcing the language of martyrdom that has surrounded his campaigns since 2016. For many supporters, belief in Trump’s victimhood has become identity, not analysis — and identity is far more resistant to factual challenge than any ordinary political position.
The Profitable Persecution
Trump’s persecution narrative is not merely persuasive — it is a business model. Every new indictment, investigation, or hostile media segment has historically triggered an immediate fundraising surge. His platform, Truth Social, serves simultaneously as megaphone and monetization engine. He has sold branded merchandise and Bibles invoking themes of embattlement and martyrdom. And now, with his IRS lawsuit, the grievance machinery has potentially come full circle: a complaint about institutional victimization that — if settled favorably — would result in a taxpayer-funded payout to the president himself. The architecture is durable precisely because it converts every attack into a resource, every setback into a rally cry, and every enemy into a fundraising opportunity.
After the Correspondents’ Dinner shooting, Republican senators moved to authorize $400 million in federal funding, with Senator Graham suggesting private donations could remain in play for furnishings or other expenses. What will happen to the hundreds of millions already raised and sitting in a private nonprofit shielded from standard conflict-of-interest review? That has not been addressed by the legislation or the White House and given the lack transparency in the ballroom fund it is reasonable to speculate on the probability of diversion to other uses.
Trump transferred $1.2 billion of US funds to the Board of Peace. He has pledged to transfer a total of $10 billion. These are taxpayer funds that will be totally under his personal control and can be used at his discretion. There is no public accountability for these funds.
For those who wonder about Donald Trump’s motivation for his persecution narrative, his personal wealth has almost doubled in little more than a year since his inauguration.
The Authoritarian Parallels
Scholars of democratic backsliding have noted that Trump’s strategy tracks closely with patterns seen in other countries where elected leaders have gradually dismantled independent institutions. The elements are recognizable: vilify the press as the enemy of the people; claim that legal proceedings against you are politically motivated; replace career officials with personal loyalists; and promise retribution against those who prosecuted or opposed you. In Trump’s second term, those patterns have sharpened. The firing of an attorney general perceived as insufficiently aggressive toward critics, the second indictment of a former FBI director on a legally thin — some say imaginary — theory, the use of regulatory threats against a broadcast network that aired an unflattering joke, are not isolated incidents. They form a coherent approach in which the persecution narrative both justifies and accelerates the consolidation of power.
Critiques and Contradictions
The persecution narrative has real vulnerabilities. Legal scholars have consistently argued that Trump mischaracterizes how due process works and overstates the degree to which prosecutions against him were politically directed. Fact-checkers have documented numerous false claims woven through his victimhood rhetoric — including the Nobel Peace Prize claim, the “8 wars” assertion, and the repeated charge of a “weaponized” Justice Department that, critics note, he now controls and is actively using against his own perceived enemies. The second Comey indictment, built on a social media photo that First Amendment experts regard as clearly protected speech, has drawn criticism even from some conservative legal commentators. The IRS lawsuit’s fundamental conflict of interest — a president suing the agencies he runs for money from taxpayers — has no obvious precedent in American legal history. Whether these contradictions ultimately matter to Trump’s political standing is another question entirely.
Conclusion
Donald Trump’s persecution narrative has outlasted every legal challenge, every fact-check, and every prediction of its imminent collapse. In the spring of 2026, it is more operationally central to his presidency than ever. The narrative is the brand. It galvanizes supporters, raises money, provides cover for the use of government power against political adversaries, and makes every institutional constraint on presidential authority look like persecution rather than law. For many Americans who support Trump, his legal fate matters far less than the story his victimhood tells — and in that story lies a political power that has proven remarkably difficult to dislodge.
Illustration generated by author using ChatGPT