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Trump’s newest obsession seems to be over the number 22 – but nobody knows what it means

President Donald Trump appears to have a fixation on the number 22.

Since returning to office, the president has repeatedly cited the number while discussing a wide range of topics, from the Iran war to the U.S. economy to his beautification efforts in Washington, D.C.

Trump has claimed the U.S. military destroyed 22 Iranian ships, said he proved 22 Nobel Prize-winning economists wrong about the economy and reported meeting with 22 medical specialists during a recent examination at Walter Reed, NBC News reported.

Despite the number’s undeniable presence in Trump’s recent rhetoric, no clear explanation has emerged for its significance. The president has not publicly addressed why it has become such a frequent reference point, leaving political observers to speculate, with some social media users claiming the repetition is tied to his preoccupation with the 22nd Amendment or even cognitive decline.

It’s also not the first time he has zeroed in on a specific number in his public remarks.

President Trump appears fixated on the number 22, invoking it during remarks on the Iran war, the economy and his restoration efforts in Washington, according to a new report (Getty)

The number 22 is the president’s current focus, however, appearing in several ways.

He has also criticized The New York Times for placing a prescription drug story on page 22, complained that a hypothetical trip to Asia would require 22 hours of flying and referenced a swimming pool he constructed 22 years ago. In some cases, the number has been used inaccurately. Trump stated the capital has 22 fountains; the city actually has 18.

At a Hanukkah reception in December, Trump said that U.S. pilots who took part in an attack on Iran told him: “We were practicing for 22 years.” On Sunday, the 80-year-old president wrote on Truth Social: “Lots of Killing going on in Chicago. 22 people shot.”

Some social media users have offered up an explanation. Namely, that Trump’s latest preoccupation with the number 22 may be tied to his flirtation with the idea of a third term, something the 22nd Amendment expressly prohibits.

Since returning to office, the president has repeatedly suggested he may try to run again in 2028, and has implied that possible loopholes could exist in the Constitution.

Last March, he told NBC News that he was “not joking” about running again, adding, “a lot of people want me to do it.”

Other internet users have claimed the president is experiencing mental decline, citing his repeated use of the same number as evidence.

It’s not the first time Trump has fixated on one number. Outlets previously reported that he frequently reached for the numbers 93 and 10,000 when delivering public remarks. Pictured here, Trump attends the UFC Freedom 250 event on his 80th birthday
It’s not the first time Trump has fixated on one number. Outlets previously reported that he frequently reached for the numbers 93 and 10,000 when delivering public remarks. Pictured here, Trump attends the UFC Freedom 250 event on his 80th birthday (Getty)

Oddly, it’s not the first time Trump has been fixated on a number. Last year, The Atlanticreported that he frequently referenced 92.

He claimed, for example, that he won Wayne County, North Carolina, by 92 percent (his actual margin was 16 percentage points), and that the U.S. controls 92 percent of the Gulf of Mexico’s shoreline. In reality, the U.S. share is closer to 46 percent, the outlet reported.

During his first term, in 2019, Bloomberg noted that Trump often reached for a larger number: 10,000.

“He says it’s the number of points the Dow Jones Industrial Average would be up had the Federal Reserve not raised interest rates,” the outlet reported. “It’s the number of people attending his rallies — or the number forced to wait outside because they couldn’t get in.”

Other presidents have also had unusual relationships with certain numbers.

Franklin Roosevelt avoided traveling on the 13th of any month and refused to host dinners with 13 guests, according to the Smithsonian Magazine. Woodrow Wilson took the opposite view, calling 13 “the luckiest of numerals” and even dropping his middle name so his full name contained 13 letters.

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