Trump is living rent free in Hillary’s head.
Former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton is making headlines again—this time for admitting she has been “daydreaming” about a nationwide announcement declaring President Donald Trump “gone.” Clinton revealed the bizarre fantasy in a video she shared across Instagram and X after a fire alarm interrupted a live event on November 18.
During the discussion, hosted with historian Heather Cox Richardson and actor Lin-Manuel Miranda, Clinton used the interruption as an opening to describe what she called her ideal moment.
“I wish there could be a huge national sound system,” Clinton said, “and we would all wake up to: ‘Attention, attention. We have found the problem and we have solved it—he is gone.’” The crowd responded with loud applause.
Clinton then pushed her audience to stay politically active, insisting that her imagined “Goodbye, Trump” moment can only happen if they “make it happen.”
The White House did not comment on her remarks.
WATCH:
When a fire announcement interrupts the event… you might find yourself daydreaming about a "Goodbye Trump" 🚨.
— Hillary Clinton (@HillaryClinton) November 22, 2025
Go to https://t.co/wLOD9eLOLf to get virtual playback of the event with your support of Onward Together and @latinovictoryus. pic.twitter.com/JavQ7b4qlQ
A Fundraiser Framed as Activism
The event supported Latino Victory and Onward Together, two activist groups that Clinton uses to influence elections and promote progressive candidates. Clinton framed these organizations as the front line against what she called a “tide of intolerance and cruelty.”
For many conservative voters—especially those age 50 and older—Clinton’s comments serve as a reminder that Democrat political machine operatives remain laser-focused on tearing down President Trump, even as he leads the America-First movement.
Clinton Still Obsessed With Trump Years After 2016
Despite nearly a decade passing since her stunning loss to Donald Trump, Clinton continues to take public shots at him. Just days before this event, she criticized Trump’s White House renovations, claiming on X: “It’s not his house. It’s your house. And he’s destroying it.”
Her comment backfired immediately, as conservatives revisited the 2001 scandal in which the Clintons returned more than $28,000 in items after reports showed the so-called “gifts” were actually taxpayer-funded White House property.
A Pattern That Won’t Go Away
Clinton’s latest comments show a familiar pattern: any time she steps back into the spotlight, she uses the moment to attack Trump, stir partisan outrage, and re-live the 2016 race she has never truly accepted.
For millions of Americans, her “Goodbye, Trump” fantasy reflects the same political bitterness and elitism that pushed voters toward Donald Trump in the first place—an America-First movement that remains strong and growing.






