President Trump appeared at the 74th National Prayer Breakfast on Feb. 5, 2026, and took the opportunity to dredge up old grudges about past elections while dropping a new piece of misinformation: He actually won the popular vote in 2016. While doing so, he also admitted his primary priority is his own ego.
Trump said, “They rigged the second election,” meaning 2020, and the baseless claim that he won. Then, referring to 2024, he added, “I had to win it.” He continued, “I needed it for my own ego. I would’ve had a bad ego for the rest of my life. Now I really have a big ego. Beating these lunatics was incredible … the first time they said I didn’t win the popular vote. I did.”
The truth about 2016
While Trump isn’t typically so frank about his own ego, in 2016, he lost the national popular vote to Hillary Clinton by about 2.9 million votes. He won the Electoral College, which is what actually determines the presidency.
So, by claiming he “did” win the popular vote, he is factually incorrect. But Trump often exaggerates or misrepresents facts to emphasize his dominance.
In the past, Trump has repeatedly claimed, without evidence, that “millions of people voted illegally” in 2016, implying that he actually won the popular vote, too. Some supporters repeat this, often calling it “voter fraud” or “the popular vote was stolen,” even though state-by-state audits and federal officials confirmed the results.
Trump in heaven: “Not a perfect candidate”
In addition to dredging up past election grievances, Trump also used the Prayer Breakfast to highlight his record on religion and contrast it with Democrats, saying he has done “more for religion than any other president” and arguing that religion in America is “back now, hotter than ever before.”
He framed the event as part of a larger effort to defend religious freedom and encourage faith’s role in public life, suggesting Democrats are unsympathetic to people of faith and questioning “how a person of faith can vote for a Democrat.”
Trump referenced earlier remarks about the afterlife, saying at one point he had quipped, “I’m never gonna make it to Heaven. I just don’t think I qualify. I don’t think there’s a thing I can do.” He then pushed back on how the media reported those remarks, calling them a joke and a misunderstanding.
He added, “I really think I probably should make it,” while also acknowledging that he’s “not a perfect candidate” but insisting he’s done “a hell of a lot of good.”
Published: Feb 5, 2026 02:39 pm