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What is Melania Trump thinking? She revels in the role of the good immigrant

What is she thinking? (Credit: Chip Somodevilla/Getty)

What is she thinking? (Credit: Chip Somodevilla/Getty)


December 9, 2024   8 mins

Behind the feline eyes, the serrated cheekbones and campy glamour, there is a hint of pain to Melania Trump. She displays a vulnerability, a sense of betrayal and a frustration at being misunderstood. She has described herself as “the most bullied person in the world”. In interviews, especially those conducted in more recent years, you can detect something guarded and wounded in her.

Or maybe that’s just me. Despite her many years in the public eye as elite arm candy, including her four years as first lady, we still don’t really know who she is. In 2012, Melania tweeted a photo of a Beluga whale with the question, “what is she thinking?” Twelve years on, it is still difficult to ascertain. Years of relentless press scrutiny and a new memoir have supplied us only with hints. This impenetrability is part of what makes her such a perfect site for our projections. We see what we want to see.

Liberals love to hate her. She has been mocked for her accent, for being multilingual, and has been the victim of xenophobia and sexist barbs. “I can say ‘anal costs extra’ in six languages,” was one viral meme. News that she was going to make changes to the White House rose garden in 2020 was met with a xenophobic tweet storm by former New York Times reporter Kurt Eichenwald, expressing fury that a “foreigner” had “the audacity to … pull up history dating back a lifetime…These trashy, evil, stupid people need to get out of our house. What GALL she has.” American comedian Rosie O’Donnell has tweeted a video suggesting that Melania’s beloved only son, Barron, had autism. And feminists described her delightedly as “the only first lady to pose naked”. With Melania, the rigid dictates about how we use language to talk about identity no longer apply. We can say what we like.

Now Melania is returning to the White House, and she is already signalling that she’ll be charting an independent course. She has refused the traditional tea meeting with outgoing First Lady, Jill Biden, citing the Biden administration’s alleged role in the raid on Mar-a-Lago in 2022. And she is not the least bit approachable, unlike Michelle Obama who did folksy Q&As on Vine, or Jill Biden, who once tweeted “you can take the girl out of Philly” after physically blocking protesters with her own body, prompting Vox to applaud her “relatable toughness”. Melania is restrained and unknowable — a cipher in an era of garish American confessionalism.

Admittedly, her protectiveness is hard-earned. A former friend, confidante and advisor, Stephanie Winston Wolkoff, recorded their private conversations and wrote a tell-all book, Melania and Me: The Rise and Fall of my Friendship with the First Lady. Most salaciously, the book details the tensions between Melania and her daughter-in-law, Ivanka. Wolkoff describes her efforts to sideline Ivanka at the inauguration and keep her out of official portraits, while Melania privately refers to her daughter-in-law as “Princess”.

The announcement of her memoir, Melania, was treated as yet another violation of decorum, a departure from sanctified democratic tradition, and therefore suspect. Her patriotic immigrant story, a fairy tale about becoming American, was described as a last-ditch cash grab before the election: another tawdry consumer item for sale alongside the Trump coins, the trading cards, and the $100,000 Trump Victory Tourbillion watch. (There is also an 18K “First Lady” watch in rose gold, which retails for a more modest sum of $799). But while the Trumps’ tacky profiteering is undeniable, she was hardly the First Lady to monetise her position. Michelle Obama’s own memoir, Becoming, received a soft-focus rock star treatment: it was an Oprah’s Book Club selection, and was accompanied by a stadium tour and soundtrack by Questlove. In 2018, the Obamas signed a multi-year deal with Netflix, a corporate partnership that was never subjected to similar criticism by the liberal commentariat.

Melania was born in 1970 in Slovenia, the wealthiest republic of what was then socialist Yugoslavia. She describes an idyllic life full of foreign travel, sports cars, and fashion — hardly the drab, walled-off hell of many Cold War propagandists’ fantasies. Her upbringing in the republic of Slovenia during the Seventies and Eighties was happy, she insists; she wanted for nothing. Young Melania Knaus ran on the cobblestone streets of the UNESCO World Heritage city Dubrovnik in Croatia; she went shopping in Italy, and walked in her mother’s fashion shows in the Yugoslav capital of Belgrade. She is therefore very much a child of the socialism of leader Josip Broz Tito, himself a lover of luxury cars, yachts, and fine cigars. Tito also cultivated an image of elite glamour.

Around the time of Melania’s birth, Tito was photographed driving Sophia Loren around in a golf cart and hosting Richard Burton and Elizabeth Taylor on the Croatian coast. An entry from Burton’s diary in 1971 notes that Tito and his wife lived in “remarkable luxury unmatched by anything else I’ve seen”. The very next year, bronzed Penthouse publisher Bob Guccione opened the opulent Penthouse Adriatic Club on the Croatian island of Krk, which included a luxury hotel and casino, and was staffed by female “pets” in skimpy French maid uniforms. There were even rumours that one of the swimming pools was filled with champagne. When it flopped and closed the very next year, Guccione attempted a similarly inspired hotel and casino project in Atlantic City, New Jersey. But misfortune struck again and he ran out of money. The project was soon rescued by none other than Donald Trump, who purchased the half-finished Guccione property, opening the Trump Plaza Hotel and Casino in 1984. Melania’s image can therefore easily be situated within the Yugoslav tradition, and she herself can be seen as an extension of the golden age of Seventies Titoist luxury and glamour.

But nothing in the book answers the question always lurking: “What is she thinking?” Written in superficial, thank you-note politesse, Melania, in typical fashion, recedes from view. The delivers the stiff immigrant narrative, light on personal details but heavy on easy moralising. “Life’s circumstances shape you in many ways, often entirely beyond your control,” she writes. “Your birth, parental influences, and the world in which you grow up. As an adult, there comes a moment when you become solely responsible for the life you lead. You must take charge, embrace that responsibility, and become the architect of your own future.”

“In an era of diminished sexual dimorphism in the West, Melania’s performance of exaggerated femininity seems almost drag.”

It is standard pull-yourself-up-by-your-bootstraps fare, Americana imbued with the usual veneration of hard work and self-reliance. But Melania is aligning herself with a particular kind of immigrant, the kind that is part of her husband’s flock: the “good”, Trump-supporting foreigner who is patriotic, embraces American values, and does not feel victimised by their adopted country. In Melania’s world, we can surmise, immigrants of her kind stand in contrast to those who resent their country, reject its values, and call it racist. The latter see structural racism and xenophobia as the forces that have ultimately shaped their lives: responsibility is mostly external to oneself. In contrast, for the Trumpian immigrant, responsibility lies within. Despite years of Democratic Party courting, the recent presidential election has made clear that a great number of foreign-born Americans now identify more closely with Melania’s immigration narrative.

While she takes great care to depict her early years in sunny terms, there are indications that all was not easy. “As a child, I was somewhat shielded from the darker aspects of the system, but its presence loomed in the back of our minds,” she says. We know from other sources that her father, Viktor Knavs, was a member of the Communist Party of Yugoslavia and appears in the police files of UDBA, the Directorate for State Security. Identified as a travelling salesman. He is thought to have violated Yugoslavia’s criminal code, supposedly through tax evasion. Though some American have suggested that Knavs should have been denied US citizenship on the basis of the alleged criminal record, it is possible that UDBA’s interest in Knavs was purely political. As someone who frequently travelled abroad and owned a fleet of cars, Knavs would have likely drawn the attention of the Yugoslav authorities.

None of that is interrogated in her glossy and unexpectedly sympathetic portrait of Yugoslavia in in the last decades before the country began to fall apart. Her story is as sleek and immaculate as the woman herself. And yet, the tiny Alpine country of just over two million has a complex relationship with its native daughter. “The Melania effect” boosted tourism to Slovenia when the Trumps were last in the White House, and Balkan media is already anticipating renewed interest in the country, with enterprising restaurants and artisans already mass producing Melania-themed dishes and products. But not everyone is happy: in 2019, a wood carving of Melania was erected in Rozno, in south-eastern Slovenia, not far from her hometown of Sevnica. A year later, the wooden carving was burned in a “politically motivated” arson attack, and swiftly replaced with a more durable bronze statue in September 2020.

Back in her adopted country, the attitude is similarly mixed. The continued fascination with her is rooted in her stubborn adherence to traditional modes of gender expression, and her total disinterest in the current imperative of female emancipation. In Melania, she doubles down on her utter fidelity to her wifely duties –infidelities go unmentioned – and to her motherly obligations, her “protection” of Barron first and foremost. She presents, with echoes of Jackie O and Diana, as the betrayed but faithful wife, the princess trapped in a tower, the fiercely devoted mother. She is playing a role of exaggerated femininity, which, in an era of diminished sexual dimorphism in the West, seems almost drag-like.

When asked, in 1999, the year after they first met, if she could picture herself as first lady one day, she demurred: “I would be very traditional, like Jackie Kennedy.” And she was ready to abandon her modelling career in the event that Trump ever became president. “I would stand by him,” she insists, true to form. During a 2005 interview on Larry King Live as newlyweds, Trump claimed that they’d never had a single fight, calling Melania “the rock”. In that interview, she admitted that to be with a man like Donald, “you have to know who you are” and “be smart and strong”. Both insist that theirs is a relationship of equals. But as with other aspects of Melania’s life, much about their marriage — her feelings about her husband’s infidelities, for one — remains an enigma.

It’s easy for women to paint their own opinions on to this blank canvas. A certain cohort are determined that she is the powerless victim of her husband and his politics. The princess in the tower of so many fairy tales, beautiful and trapped. The “free Melania” mania of the first Trump administration, speaks to this inability to understand why she might have chosen to be with this “monster’. And yet, there is very little evidence that Melania is dreaming of freedom. In fact, her memoir offers a glimpse of a very different side of Melania. After the Trumps have left the White House, the FBI raids their home in Mar-a-Lago, and Melania describes a sense of violation. Here her narrative shifts from a studious avoidance of victimisation rhetoric to one of victimhood. After taking so much care to reiterate the need to take responsibility for one’s life, one’s choices, and one’s destiny, she embraces the role of the embittered, wronged victim. Blame is never hers or her husband’s; it is assigned untrustworthy assistants, chiefs of staff, speechwriters, political opponents, and the liberal media. We even get the sense that her much-maligned anti-cyberbullying initiative, Be Best, is actually about herself.

And yet, in other moments, Melania appears sincere. Certainly when she’s talking about “a woman’s natural right to make decisions about her own body and health”, which she did in her book. The revelation that Melania is pro-choice came a few weeks before the election, when the Democrats were attempting to use the Trump-Vance ticket’s anti-abortion stance as a means of cajoling the undecided or uninspired into voting for them. Whether she was being used to appeal to women voters, or if she was sincere, it’s hard to tell. Inevitably, feminist activists refused to take it at face value. “They’re not embracing it at all,” she said in an interview shortly after her book came out. “They’re saying it was a scam, that it was a lie.”This, then, is the price you pay for being unknowable. Everyone simply believes what they want.

Melania shrugs it all off. And her public statements since her husband’s victory have emphasised unity. “I anticipate the citizens of our nation rejoining in commitment to each other and rising above ideology for the sake of individual liberty, economic prosperity, and security,” she wrote on November 7. In her first post-election interview on Fox & Friends last week, Melania dismissed the importance of Vogue covers and flattering press coverage. “We have more important things to do,” she says. Perhaps she has fooled us all. Perhaps there is a more complex, mature first lady about to move into the White House. There have been indications of that complexity before. When the interviewer in 1999 suggested that she might be with Trump for his money, noting that there weren’t too many 20-something supermodels on the arms of car mechanics, she responded with a rare flicker of depth. “You can’t sleep and you can’t hug with beautiful things, with a beautiful apartment, with a beautiful plane, beautiful cars, beautiful houses. You can’t do that. You can feel very empty… and if somebody said, ‘you know, you’re with a man because he’s rich and famous’, they don’t know me.”

And after all these years, we still don’t.


Lily Lynch is a writer and journalist based in Belgrade.


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Alex Lekas
Alex Lekas
2 days ago

And she is not the least bit approachable, ——-> Why might this be? Could it have something to do with years of people calling her all sorts of vile names? Could it have a thing to do with how we spend years being feted with first ladies as fashion icons or whatever else, yet an actual model in the role is blacked out by that same press? Could it have a thing to do with snarky comments about her boarding Marine One on the way to a hurricane aftermath while wearing heels because no one considered she would change into more sensible shoes en route?
As best I can tell, no one compared her to Edith Wilson 2.0, as with Jill. No one has called her a warmonger, a la Hillary. And she never whined about a mean, horrible place America despite it being the only place where a life like hers was possible, as Michelle did. Writers like this one projected their hatred of Trump – a man they ALL interviewed time and again, often in fawning fashion – onto Melania, and later onto Barron. What is she thinking? That she knows who and what you folks are, and that you’re not worth the trouble.

Samuel Ross
Samuel Ross
2 days ago
Reply to  Alex Lekas

Good point, Alex! 😉

James Twigg
James Twigg
3 days ago

It sounds to me that Lily Lynch is just jealous.

Catherine Conroy
Catherine Conroy
2 days ago

I like her. She ploughs her own furrow and after Jill Biden, who seems to have been the power behind the throne, Melania comes across simply as a person who takes what happens in her stride. She’s been smiling a great deal lately and she loves that everyone is doing the Trump dance to WMCA but laughs that she dances nothing like him.
I’m a politically homeless leftie and liberal feminists don’t speak for me, that’s for sure.

Katharine Eyre
Katharine Eyre
2 days ago

I like her too. Out of all living First Ladies, I’d like to go for tea with her most.

Satyam Nagwekar
Satyam Nagwekar
2 days ago

Good points by the other commenters. The article was truly vacuous. I wonder how this got published.

Nick Faulks
Nick Faulks
2 days ago

You see a lot worse on UnHerd.

Satyam Nagwekar
Satyam Nagwekar
2 days ago
Reply to  Nick Faulks

The piece comparing crypto’s ascendence to clamshell currency immediately comes to mind

Maverick Melonsmith
Maverick Melonsmith
1 day ago

Yes, that was absurd. At least a clamshell is a real thing.

DeAnna D Evans
DeAnna D Evans
2 days ago
Reply to  Nick Faulks

That may be tries but it doesn’t make this piece any more palatable.

Terry M
Terry M
2 days ago

Melania apparently wants a bit of privacy, having been savaged by the pack of hyenas that passes for our media. Who can blame her? And wouldn’t you feel terribly violated if government agents came into your home on a fishing expedition and went through all your stuff, even your clothing?
She appears to understand how to keep her marriage going and has done a good job raising Baron, as far as anyone can tell. Add that to her modeling/business career and I think she is to be admired; certainly much more than Jackie or Jill.

El Uro
El Uro
2 days ago

From what I know about her father, he and Trump have a lot in common. For me, this is the best proof that she did not marry for money, but for a man. Trump was her choice, not she Trump’s choice.
She reminds me of Kate in some ways. Absolutely natural inborn aristocracy, restraint and lack of habit of complaining.

Johann Strauss
Johann Strauss
3 days ago

The problem with Lily Finch’s article is that she repeats hearsay. There is extensive reference to Trump’s infidelities. Yet these so-called infidelities are simply alleged and nobody has any idea whether these are true or not. What we do know is that the Democrats wanted to bring Trump down by any means possible, and alleging infidelities is one way they tried. Unless proven otherwise, I call BS on all those allegations by gold diggers engaged in blackmail.

Maverick Melonsmith
Maverick Melonsmith
2 days ago
Reply to  Johann Strauss

I can’t tell if you’re being serious. If you are, I’d say you were being extraordinarily naive.

Johann Strauss
Johann Strauss
2 days ago

I’m absolutely being serious, because, in contrast to you, I don’t suffer from TDS (e.g. I don’t regard Trump as “the world’s biggest narcissist” as you stated in a later comment).

Maverick Melonsmith
Maverick Melonsmith
1 day ago
Reply to  Johann Strauss

So you actually think Trump has remained faithful to his wives? Seriously? I actually don’t care about his infidelities. I am happy enough for consenting adults to have sex with other consenting adults, irrespective of whether they are married to other people. To the extent that I have issues with Trump, that isn’t one of them.

Bret Larson
Bret Larson
1 day ago

So why comment on it at all.

Maverick Melonsmith
Maverick Melonsmith
1 day ago
Reply to  Bret Larson

Because this whole “infidelities” stuff seems to have some meaning for the Religious Right.

Steve Jolly
Steve Jolly
2 days ago
Reply to  Johann Strauss

I’d say at least some of Trump’s infidelities are probably real. Then again, for most of human history, male infidelity was generally expected and tacitly tolerated, particularly among the wealthy and powerful, who had access, then as now, to multiple willing partners. So long as the men avoided unwanted consequences like public scandal and illegitimate children, it was standard practice among noblewomen to simply look the other way. Melania comes from an older, more conservative culture that is much closer to that history than to our modern notions of feminist empowerment.

Neither is using such indiscretions for political purposes anything new. Remember how many hoops the Republicans jumped through just to get Bill Clinton to talk about the Monica Lewinsky scandal under oath. They then attempted to impeach him for lying about it, a strategy which failed utterly and backfired in terms of public relations. If anything, such a recent incident should have instructed the Democrats how objectively stupid it was to try to use Trump’s private life to create similar scandal and legal repercussions. Then there’s the only other President to win non-consecutive elections, Grover Cleveland, who fathered an illegitimate child and made a poor attempt to cover it up. The other side tried to use it for political advantage but it didn’t work then either. Probably helped that Cleveland was running against one of the most corrupt politicians in that or any other age of American history so the voters probably didn’t see a lot of difference between the two. In general, I’d say that it’s wiser for political commentators and media to avoid publicizing scandals from the private dealings of candidates. Justified or not, it doesn’t actually work. There’s no upside to this. Even if the scandal proves the horrible character of the individual, that matters less than one would think. It’s possible to be a horrible person and still be a good or even a great leader. History’s cup overflows with examples. There’s really no upside into all this digging into the private lives of political figures, other than the obvious one of being able to sell newspapers/magazines/etc.

Samuel Ross
Samuel Ross
2 days ago
Reply to  Steve Jolly

Indeed, Steve. I find that the most critical often cannot bear analysis of their own words and deeds.

Johann Strauss
Johann Strauss
3 days ago

The second thing that is curious about Lily Lunch’s article is that it is unbelievably catty. Why not simply admit up front that Melania is drop dead gorgeous in the super-model mode, and she is far and away (not even close) the most beautiful 1st Lady in the history of the US (and that would include Jackie O).

Philip Hanna
Philip Hanna
3 days ago

I read this whole article but I don’t really understand what the point is.

DeAnna D Evans
DeAnna D Evans
2 days ago
Reply to  Philip Hanna

Perhaps the author doesn’t like that Melania isn’t willing to share all the details of her personal life with us? That’s what “famous” people are apparently supposed to do nowadays, all for our entertainment. I don’t care if she wants to remain private and I certainly don’t waste my time wondering what she is “really’ thinking.

Maverick Melonsmith
Maverick Melonsmith
2 days ago

“She displays a vulnerability, a sense of betrayal and a frustration at being misunderstood”. She is after all married to the world’s leading narcissist, so that can’t be too much of a surprise.

Johann Strauss
Johann Strauss
2 days ago

But here’s the thing. Trump is going to revive the US which will be great once again for everybody living there. Meanwhile under 2 tier Starmer, the UK is rapidly decaying into nothingness.

Maverick Melonsmith
Maverick Melonsmith
1 day ago
Reply to  Johann Strauss

Trump is not going to “revive the US”. He’s going to pander to his own ego for four more years, and that will be it.

Gayle Rosenthal
Gayle Rosenthal
2 days ago

What a shallow and trashy piece ! I’m not sure the ending of the piece justifies its existence. Too much time is spent trying to point out that it’s possible to commit tax evasion in a communist country, or that her femininity is “almost drag”. If the author had led with Melania’s actual comments and focused on those, rather than salacious fantasy, we might have learned something. Try leading with what we do know about her. To be with a man like Donald you have to know who you are. Now that would be a different article all together. Lilly Lynch should try sticking with facts instead of playing out her own salacious fantasies of some strange pathology of sexual dimorphism.

El Uro
El Uro
2 days ago

It seems that being a woman means being bad

Mike Fraser
Mike Fraser
2 days ago

what is the point of this article full of jealous vacuity. If Lily Lynch had been a product, I would have demanded my money back and reviewed her as Not fit for purpose. Any purpose.
Rather like a glass of red wine ordered in a restaurant, if its corked its the restaurant’s fault. If I don’t like its taste, bouquet whatever its my fault for ordering it.
In this case its corked and if Unherd is ever thinking of opening a restaurant make sure the wine before is tasted and stored well first.

M To the Tea
M To the Tea
2 days ago

She is an immigrant. She understands us more than we need to understand her because she observes us through the lens of her own culture and the assimilated experience, making her far more conscious than the writer and the media professionals. She is intelligent enough to know what to say, when to say it, and, most importantly, what not to say in this culture to remain true individual!

Bret Larson
Bret Larson
1 day ago
Reply to  M To the Tea

Not talking to those who are looking to destroy your husband sounds like wisdom to me.

Evan Heneghan
Evan Heneghan
2 days ago

I feel like I’ve just been ChatGPT’d

Hugh Bryant
Hugh Bryant
2 days ago

There is nothing on earth quite like the snobbery of America’s liberal elites.

mike flynn
mike flynn
2 days ago
Reply to  Hugh Bryant

Snobbery is a virtue compared to how these elites treat those who disagree with them. Criminal.

El Uro
El Uro
2 days ago
Reply to  Hugh Bryant

This snobbery evaporates in the blink of an eye in the face of big money.

mike flynn
mike flynn
2 days ago

And the hit pieces keep rolling in. Disgusting.

Vesselina Zaitzeva
Vesselina Zaitzeva
2 days ago

What was this article about?
Yes, I understand that it was about Melania Trump.
But what was it about?

Vesselina Zaitzeva
Vesselina Zaitzeva
2 days ago

The comment below was immediately removed by the UnHerd moderation system. What was so criminal about it, I don’t know.
Here’s the comment itself:
What was this article about?
Yes, I understand that it was about Melania Trump.
But what was it about?

Samuel Ross
Samuel Ross
2 days ago

I see it directly above; it was a very apt and witty comment …

Vesselina Zaitzeva
Vesselina Zaitzeva
1 day ago
Reply to  Samuel Ross

Thank you Samuel for your kind words 🙂 Both comments were restored simultaneously after I wrote to UnHerd asking them about the removal of the posts

Maverick Melonsmith
Maverick Melonsmith
1 day ago

It would appear that it wasn’t in fact removed (given that it appears below).

Vesselina Zaitzeva
Vesselina Zaitzeva
1 day ago

They were both removed, or, more specifically, disappeared before being posted.
Then both were restored simultaneously after I complained to UnHerd (something I do on a regular basis when my comments are taken down for no obvious reason )

Marcie Neville
Marcie Neville
2 days ago

“Campy fashion”?! Seriously? Did the author compare Jill Biden’s fashion choices? I have never seen Melania in anything remotely campy or tacky, she far better dressed than any First Lady since Jackie Kennedy

JR Stoker
JR Stoker
2 days ago

To answer the question at the opening of your second paragraph: yes, that’s just you.

Mrs Trump is behaving with the restraint and decorum traditionally shown by First Ladies. Pity some writers don’t have the same values.

Maverick Melonsmith
Maverick Melonsmith
1 day ago
Reply to  JR Stoker

Plus, she had the decency to come out in favor of abortion. That made me more kindly disposed towards her.

Dougie Undersub
Dougie Undersub
2 days ago

Since the writer is apparently unaware that Ivanka is Melania’s step-daughter, not her daughter-in-law, how much of this twaddle can we believe?

andy young
andy young
2 days ago

Just a pet peeve: it’s UNinterested not DISinterested.
It matters because it suggests it’s impossible to to be interested but unbiased, which is what disinterested means. A judge, referee etc. should be extremely interested in whatever they’re adjudicating but unprejudiced about the outcome, i.e. disinterested.

Bret Larson
Bret Larson
1 day ago

The idea that trump is anti abortion is comical. I really can’t stand writers trying to push stupid narratives.

Maverick Melonsmith
Maverick Melonsmith
1 day ago
Reply to  Bret Larson

Trump is “pro” things that he perceives are good for him, and “anti” things that he perceives aren’t good for him. However, I think that there is a reasonable chance that Trump has paid for the odd abortion or two during his life.

John Hughes
John Hughes
1 day ago

Lily Lynch writes, ‘Melania Trump…. displays a vulnerability, a sense of betrayal and a frustration at being misunderstood. She has described herself as “the most bullied person in the world”.’ Sounds familiar. Tina Brown described a few years ago (in interviews for her book ‘The Palace Papers’) how horribly Camilla Parker-Bowles was treated by the press and endless commentators and pundits for years. ‘We forget now how she was reviled’ in the 1990s. Well she is HM The Queen now so Melania T can look forward with some hope that she will be subject of a similar transformation…. which the article suggests may already be happening.

Billy Bob
Billy Bob
2 days ago

“What is Melania Trump thinking?”
She’s probably hoping the cheeseburger diet will finish the old codger off so she can spend his money in peace

Maverick Melonsmith
Maverick Melonsmith
2 days ago
Reply to  Billy Bob

That at least is plausible.

Dave Canuck
Dave Canuck
2 days ago
Reply to  Billy Bob

She is so cold they won’t need refrigerators in the white house

Samuel Ross
Samuel Ross
2 days ago
Reply to  Billy Bob

Be kind, Bob ….