Where’s Trump? President goes almost full week without a public event amid health questions and tumbling polls

With five months remaining until the midterm elections that could decide the fate of his final two years in office, Donald Trump is spending more of his time holed up behind closed doors, engaging in safe interviews with friendly allies and venturing out only to play golf at his own properties.
The president’s schedule on Wednesday included a hefty chunk of so-called “executive time” spent in the White House residence — an increasing presence on his daily schedule — along with a smattering of what aides refer to as “policy meetings,” and a “Rose Garden Club” dinner on the patio outside the Oval Office, where he often rewards supporters with invitations.
All told, Wednesday will mark just about a week since Trump has done a public event or one that was open to the White House press corps, with the last such being a May 27 Cabinet — a day after he visited Walter Reed National Military Medical Center in Bethesda, Maryland for what he called a “six-month physical” in a Truth Social post declaring that “everything” had “checked out PERFECTLY” during the exam.
The president’s relative invisibility over the last week comes amid questions about the health of a commander-in-chief who will turn 80 on June 14 and his fitness to serve in what has been described as the world’s most demanding job.
Trump is also the oldest person to ever start a term as president.
His light public schedule and lack of engagement with the broader press corps continues a trend that started in February, when he unilaterally started the war with Iran that has led to skyrocketing gas prices and a corresponding slide in his approval ratings which could portend significant losses for his party in the midterm elections.
Data obtained by The Independent from the White House Transition Project shows that the start of the Iran war marked a significant shift in the president’s visibility — and an increase in the White House’s efforts to make him appear busy by loading his schedule with descriptions of “executive time,” “policy time,” and other meetings.
From Feb. 28, the first day of the war, to the end of April, Trump held 32 short question-and-answer sessions with the White House press pool, plus three news conferences (one solo and two joint).
The same data showed he held 21 Q-and-A sessions during the first month and eight days of the second year of his term — Jan. 20 of this year through the start of the war on Feb. 28 — indicating a large reduction in the amount of time he spent speaking to the press pool since the start of the war.
The president initially attempted to fill the void left by his lack of public appearances by spending significant amounts of time on the phone with reporters who’d dialed his personal mobile number — including The Independent — for a remarkable total of 138 short interviews in 61 days (at least two a day over a seven-day week).
But even the pace of Trump’s unprecedented outreach via cellular telephone has flagged over the last few weeks as he has dialed back on his appearances.
At the same time, he has more or less appeared to have given up on the signature campaign rallies that have characterized his political operation since his first run for the presidency kicked off in 2015.
And when Trump does appear before cameras, he often appears exhausted and haggard, and at times he has been seen to close his eyes for significant periods, leading observers to believe he has fallen asleep.
His physical appearance has also given rise to questions about his condition, including frequent appearances of bruising on both hands (which the White House attributes to his over use of aspirin combined with frequent vigorous hand-shaking), swelling in his lower legs that has been blamed on a circulatory ailment known as Chronic Veinous Insufficiency, and a rash on his neck.

