04/01/2026 / By Cassie B.

Longtime Donald Trump supporter Alex Jones has publicly turned on the president, declaring him mentally and physically unfit for office and urging his followers to “cut bait.” The dramatic pronouncement, made during Jones’s Tuesday podcast broadcast, centers on alarming claims about Trump’s health and cognitive state, which the White House has forcefully dismissed as a fabricated ploy for attention.
Jones, whose support was once enthusiastically reciprocated by Trump, painted a dire portrait of the president’s condition. He pointed to visible signs he interpreted as serious medical issues, stating, “When your ankles swell up three times the size they were before, that means heart failure.” He further claimed Trump’s speech patterns indicated cognitive decline, adding, “He does babble and it sounds like the brain’s not doing too hot.”
The podcast host’s assessment was bleak and final. “Not the man he was that last year,” Jones said. “We need to be sad about Trump. This is not funny. This is not good. But he’s gone. And that’s it.” Jones suggested that even Trump’s closest aides are alarmed but remaining loyal out of a sense of duty, naming Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth and the press secretary as being “freaked out.”
The White House response was swift and unequivocal. Spokesperson Davis Ingle, in a statement provided to multiple outlets, called the story “a complete bulls*** story that’s being desperately told to boost podcast views.” Ingle vigorously defended the president, asserting, “The truth is that President Trump is the sharpest and most accessible President in American history who is working nonstop to solve problems and deliver on his promises, and he remains in excellent health.”
This official stance is backed by the president’s most recent annual physical exam, released in April 2025, which concluded Trump was in “excellent health” and “fully fit to execute the duties of the Commander-in-Chief.” The White House has previously addressed public curiosity about Trump’s health, attributing marks on his hands to a long-standing aspirin regimen and the rigors of frequent public engagement.
Beyond health concerns, Jones framed his call to abandon Trump as a necessary political tactic ahead of the midterm elections. He cited a poll showing a drop in the president’s approval rating, arguing that Republican candidates must distance themselves to avoid electoral disaster. “Trump is in free fall, and that means we’re in free fall in the midterms,” Jones warned his audience.
His proposed solution was a clear break. He urged Republicans to position themselves as the true heirs of the America First movement while separating from Trump personally. “We need to say, ‘We liked Trump of the past, we’re sorry he’s obviously had an aneurysm or something or a stroke, but we’re not Trump,'” Jones advised.
The rift highlighted by Jones’s comments is not isolated. Other prominent voices in the podcast sphere who once supported Trump, including Joe Rogan, have recently expressed criticism over specific policies, particularly regarding foreign conflict. This signals a potential fraying of a once-solid media alliance, underscoring the high-stakes political environment.
For many observers, this episode is more than a personal feud; it reflects the volatile nature of political loyalty in the digital age, where media figures command vast audiences and can shift narratives overnight. The intense personalization of politics means the physical and mental fitness of leaders is constantly under a microscope, often becoming a proxy for broader ideological battles.
The fundamental question now is whether Jones’s dramatic defection represents a fringe opinion or the leading edge of a broader reconsideration among the president’s base. Will his call to “cut bait” resonate with listeners who have followed both men for years, or will it be rejected as disloyalty at a critical time?
Ultimately, this public fracture serves as a reminder of the powerful and unpredictable role played by independent media voices in modern politics. As the White House fights to project an image of strength and stability, challenges from within what was once considered friendly territory reveal the complex and often contentious landscape of American conservatism today. The coming weeks will show whether this is a momentary controversy or a significant crack in the foundation of Trump’s support.
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Tagged Under:
Alex Jones, big government, celebrities, cognitive decline, conspiracy, deception, GOP, lunatics, Midterm elections, politics, president, propaganda, traitors, Trump, White House
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