Salman Rushdie has said the prospect of Donald Trump returning to the White House is “unbearable,” and he “might” return to London, England, if it happens.
India-born Rushdie is best known as the author of The Satanic Verses, a 1988 novel that earned a fatwa from the late Grand Ayatollah of Iran, Ruhollah Khomeini, for allegedly blaspheming Islam. He has enjoyed state protection in both the United Kingdom and the United States, but Hadi Matar, an Islamist born in California to Lebanese migrants, managed to stab him during an appearance at the Chautauqua Institution in New York in 2022.
However, Trump’s possible reelection seems to be a more pressing concern for Rushdie. The author told the British press the prospect is “unbearable” and “unthinkable.”
“[H]e’ll be much worse this time. He’ll be unleashed. He’s a liar and a bully, and cares about nothing except himself,” Rushdie said.
He added that Trump’s return would make the U.S. “unlivable” and that he “might” return to London, where most of his family resides.
Britain’s exit from the European Union gives him pause, however. He believes “the damage done to England, not just economically but culturally, is so awful that’s mad too.”
It is not the first time Rushdie has attacked Trump and Brexit. In 2023, he suggested ‘Make America Great Again’ is an inappropriate slogan, asking: “What is the date to which we are looking backwards? Was it, for example, when there was slavery? Was it before women had the right to vote? Was it before the civil rights movement?” He also called Brexit a “catastrophe.”
Rushdie made no mention of returning to his native India as a possible alternative to living in America or Britain.
Done. You're welcome, #MadamPresident! #imwithher pic.twitter.com/IlsBpjyFsU
— Salman Rushdie (@SalmanRushdie) November 8, 2016