A famed astrologer who correctly predicted the exact date President Biden would drop out of the presidential race has revealed she believes Donald Trump will win the 2024 election.
Following the news that Biden decided to quit the presidential race last week, clairvoyant Amy Tripp has doubled down with the New York Post on her prophesying abilities, saying the former president’s ‘sun is in the penthouse of his career.’
Tripp, 40, a professional astrologer, went viral for correctly predicting that the 81-year-old president would back out of the race on July 11.
‘If Biden is made to step down it will be at the Capricorn Full Moon at 29° Capricorn. Capricorn rules the government and old age. 29° is an ending,’ Tripp posted to X, predicting that he would call it quits on July 21 – the same day he sent out a letter to America.
The ‘internet’s most notorious astrologer’ told The Post that as for Republican candidate – who just survived an assassination attempt – he has more ‘crazy things to come.’
‘Uranus is on his mid-heaven which shows … unpredictability with his career and goals,’ she said about Trump.
On top of her wildly accurate predictions regarding Biden and Trump, Tripp also called for Vice President Kamala Harris to run for president in 2024.
Biden, 81, endorsed Harris to succeed him as the Democratic nominee to take on Donald Trump in November.
Harris said she would be the one to ‘unite’ the party.
On August 11, 2020, Tripp posted to X: ‘Kamala Harris will be 60 in 4 years. I see her running for president in 2024 since this coincides with her Saturn return.’
She then called Biden ‘too old’ in a follow-up post.
‘A moon-Pluto connection signals a strong woman,’ Tripp told The Post, adding that she has a feeling Harris will win the Democratic nomination because she is in her second Saturn return.
Biden was not yet the Democratic Party’s official nominee and there is still a short time to replace him before the Democratic National Convention next month and avoid an open convention.
The party’s nomination event falls August 19-22 in Chicago, Illinois. It now appears that Harris will be at the top of the Democratic ticket by the end of that week after primary voters cast their ballots for Biden to be the nominee.
‘It’s a time when if you’ve been putting in the work since the first Saturn return at 30 you’re rewarded … usually there’s a [professional] advancement or you gain authority,’ Tripp said about Harris.
She added a troublesome prediction about Biden, who just before he dropped out announced he had Covid.
‘Pluto is on his sun,’ she said. ‘He could have some sort of health crisis come up or his health could continue to decline.’
Despite much of America worried that Biden’s health would have impacted the future of the country, during an 11-minute Oval Office address on his major decision to step down, he did not address his health.
The clearest he got to an explanation was that he didn’t want ‘ambition’ to get in the way of his goal of ‘saving’ democracy – coded language for not wanting to see former President Donald Trump win another term.
Biden’s formal address comes 28 days after his disastrous debate performance that put his reelection bid in peril.
Tripp’s final prediction was focused on the country as a whole, as she believes the US might endure a shaky August.
‘The US is still in its Pluto return, which is about bringing things to light and exposing things,’ Tripp revealed.
‘The last time, the U.S. had a Pluto return was the Revolutionary War.’
It took Harris less than two days to lock in enough delegates to become the presumptive Democratic presidential nominee.
Several top Democratic governors, lawmakers and other party leaders have all been floated as her potential vice presidential candidate.
Harris has so far requested materials from Arizona Senator Mark Kelly, North Carolina Governor Roy Cooper, Pennsylvania Governor Josh Shapiro, Michigan Governor Gretchen Whitmer, Illinois Gov governor J.B. Pritzker and Minnesota Governor Tim Walz, the Wall Street Journal reported Monday.
But noticeably absent from the list were several prominent names considered viable candidates including Kentucky Governor Andy Beshear and Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg.
It is not yet clear whether additional potential candidates will be asked for material moving forward.