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The prospect of a showdown between presidential offspring might soon become a reality if Hunter Biden, son of former President Joe Biden, has his say.
In the midst of promoting an upcoming tour with the unconventional journalist Andrew Callaghan, Hunter Biden hinted at the possibility of a cage match featuring himself against Donald Trump’s eldest children, Don Jr. and Eric.
During a social media video, Biden shared, “[Callaghan] invited me to join the Channel 5 Carnival Tour at the end of the month. We kick off in Phoenix, head to San Diego, and wrap up in Albuquerque.”
The Trump Organization has yet to comment on this playful idea, despite inquiries from the Daily Mail.
Hunter, who is 56 and stands approximately 6 feet tall, has embraced a healthier lifestyle following his recovery from public struggles with addiction. Meanwhile, 48-year-old Don Jr. enjoys weightlifting, and 42-year-old Eric, who stands about 6 feet 4 inches, prefers golf, much like his father.
While promoting an upcoming tour with Andrew Callaghan, Hunter revealed a potential cage match between himself and President Donald Trump’s oldest sons, Don Jr. and Eric
Eric Trump (left) and Donald Trump Jr. (right) have yet to respond to the challengeÂ
Hunter’s announcement comes as the Daily Mail has revealed he is now $17 million in debt and living overseas.
The disclosure came in a new legal filing submitted by his attorney Barry Coburn on April 6, in Washington DC, where the first son is being sued by his former attorneys at Winston & Strawn.
The court filing bluntly states ‘Mr Biden lives abroad’, and argues that the former First Son ‘cannot afford’ to pay off his outstanding legal fees.
The law firm defended Hunter, 56, in his tax and gun crimes cases, as well as other legal battles, but claims he failed to pay bills ‘substantially in excess of $50,000’.
On a podcast appearance last year Hunter himself claimed he was in ‘$17 million of debt.’
Coburn declined to comment to the Daily Mail, and did not specify where in the world Hunter, 56, now lives – but it’s not America.
However, last year Hunter was spotted spending time in South Africa, the birthplace of his wife Melissa, 39, the mother of his youngest child.
The couple was seen on a trip to Cape Town in May 2025, prompting President Trump to revoke his Secret Service detail over the cost of foreign travel.
Hunter was a frequent figure alongside his father in the final days of the Biden presidencyÂ
The President’s eldest son and namesake regularly pokes fun at Hunter’s well-known struggles with drug addiction, while also rejecting any comparisons between the two.
When Business Insider likened Hunter’s controversial work with a Ukrainian gas giant to his own business dealings, Don Jr. lashed out in a furious post on X.
‘The difference between me and Hunter Biden?’ Don Jr. asked, rhetorically. ‘I’ve been a businessman and serial investor my entire adult life.
‘[Hunter] became a ‘businessman’ after his dad got elected,’ Don Jr. continued. ‘I joined a Venture Capital Firm that invests in private American companies – Nothing to do with the government. He sat on foreign boards and was peddling influence to the highest bidder to change government policy.
‘Oh,’ Don Jr. added, shepherding the conversation back to Hunter’s drug problems, ‘he’s also a felon crackhead and I’m not. Thanks for playing, guys!’
Hunter stands around 6ft and has been focusing on his health after battling drug addiction
But both Don Jr. and Eric Trump have faced accusations of corruption over their business dealings, both at home and abroad.Â
As The Wall Street Journal recently revealed, the two poured money into Powerus, a Florida-based defense start-up competing for Pentagon drone contracts. The company, formed in 2025, is competing for a slice of the Pentagon’s $1.1 billion Drone Dominance initiative and is merging with a publicly traded golf company to list on the NASDAQ.
The Pentagon’s push to acquire its own drone fleet has been thrown into sharp focus by Iran’s battlefield deployment of Shahed drones costing approximately $25,000 per unit, as the US burns through missile stockpiles priced at up to $13 million each.
The venture comes after the President declared foreign-made drones a national security threat in December.
Eric Trump and Donald Trump Jr. are seen in attendance during the UFC Fight Night event at the Prudential Center on August 3, 2019 in Newark, New Jersey
The controversy is the latest in a string of deals the Trump brothers have struck in the booming US drone sector, as the administration intensifies its focus on domestic manufacturing amid the war with Iran.
Eric invested in a merger between Israeli drone firm XTEND and a Florida-based construction company to bring the firm to public markets in February.
Last year, Unusual Machines, another Florida-based drone firm, appointed Don Jr. to its board.
Unusual Machines has won money from the Pentagon, including a contract for it to manufacture 3,500 drone motors and other parts. Furthermore, Don Jr. purchased more than 331,000 shares of Unusual Machines, worth around $5.5 million, the Financial Times reported.
Chinese-made drones, particularly from tech giant DJI, have accounted for the majority of commercial drone sales in the US for the past decade. The firm now faces a questionable future in US markets, given the administration’s latest ban on foreign-made drones.
Donald Trump Jr, US President Donald J. Trump, Eric Trump attend the ribbon cutting ceremony during the opening of the Trump International Golf Links in Balmedie, Scotland on July 25
And then there is Don Jr.’s connection to the budding prediction markets, which are regulated by his father’s Commodity Futures Trading Commission.
The emerging industry’s trading platforms work like online sportsbooks by offering futures contracts at prices and returns that fluctuate like betting odds (i.e. underdogs pay off better than favorites). Customers are given binary choices (‘yes or no’ or ‘one or the other’) on any number of positions, from gas prices to the next Pope and, of course, sports: Will the Celtics win this year’s NBA title? etc.
Platforms like Kalshi and Polymarket made news during the 2024 US Presidential race by using customers’ wagers to accurately forecast Donald Sr.’s electoral victory over Kamala Harris. Since then, the industry has faced cease-and-desist orders in several states as platforms have taken billions in bets on everything from March Madness to the Masters.
Crucially, these websites consider themselves to be ‘exchanges’ rather than ‘sportsbooks.’ As a result, they face fewer taxes and are more widely available because they’re not being prohibited, or even regulated, by individual states. Rather, prediction markets are under the federal jurisdiction of the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) — something Nevada state senator Dina Titus described as a ‘backdoor way’ to legalizing sports gambling without necessary safeguards.
Don Jr. not only works as a strategic advisor to Kalshi, but also holds a similar role as well as a seat on the advisory board for Polymarket.