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International Business Times UK
International Business Times UK
Politics
Francis Louie C. Añiga

SHOCKING: Is donald trump declining rapidly potus snaps at reporter as health concerns grow over unsteady public appearances | Mind Blowing Facts

Donald Trump snapped at a reporter at Palm Beach International Airport in Florida on Monday as he prepared to board Air Force One for a trip to Tennessee, turning a routine press gaggle into another awkward public moment for the US president. The exchange was brief, but it landed at a time when Donald Trump is already facing a louder round of scrutiny over recent appearances that some viewers have described as unsteady.

The news came after video from Trump's arrival at Mar-a-Lago over the weekend drew a flood of online commentary about his movement and posture. None of that amounts to a medical diagnosis, and nothing is confirmed yet, so the speculation should be treated cautiously, but the political problem for Trump is simpler than that. The footage exists, people are watching closely, and every stiff movement now gets replayed like evidence.

Donald Trump Turns On A Friendly Network

The flare-up began when a journalist tried to ask about the presence of ICE agents at American airports. Trump cut in before the question could properly land and asked, 'Where are you from?' When the reporter replied that he was with Newsmax, Trump shot back, 'You're not doing a very good job.'

It was an arresting moment partly because Newsmax is not exactly known as hostile terrain for Trump. That made the rebuke feel less like a tactical swipe and more like a flash of irritation. The reporter attempted to return to the original question more than once, but Trump waved him off and pivoted to another journalist instead.

Then came the line that gave the episode its bite. Looking towards a Fox News camera, Trump said, 'I'm taking CNN over Newsmax. Can you believe it?' It was pure Trump in one sense, improvisational, teasing, performative. Even so, it had the brittle edge of a man who no longer seems especially patient with unexpected prompts, even from outlets that might once have expected easier treatment.

He moved on quickly when asked about Iran, offering a more conventional answer. 'We're looking for all of the things that we've been talking about. We want to see no nuclear bomb, no nuclear weapon, not even close to it.' That response brought the conversation back to policy, but by then the clip had already found its real life online, not as diplomacy, but as another fragment in the larger argument over how Trump now looks and sounds in public.

Donald Trump And The Health Speculation He Cannot Shake

That argument has been building for days. Trump appeared to shuffle as he left Air Force One on Friday, 20 March, after arriving in Florida, and he seemed to descend the aircraft stairs cautiously, at one point pausing partway down. It was the kind of small, ordinary physical moment that would probably have passed without much notice for a less scrutinised politician. With Trump, nothing passes quietly now.

Viewers on X were swift and unsparing. One wrote that he had looked 'rickety and unsteady of late', while another said he appeared 'old, tired, and dishevelled'. A third suggested the pressure around Iran was 'ageing him rapidly'. Those reactions are not evidence of illness, and they should be read as opinion rather than fact, but they show how quickly any clip of Trump is now folded into a wider public narrative about stamina, age and decline.

The concern did not begin with the airport confrontation. Trump also seemed to struggle while lowering himself into a chair during a Friday morning ceremony, gripping a table with both hands before sitting. His face, it said, appeared to grimace, as though bending his knees caused discomfort. Again, that may prove to be no more than an awkward moment caught on camera. But in politics, repeated awkward moments have a way of hardening into a story.

Trump has long insisted he is the 'healthiest president', even as critics have pointed to public gaffes, discoloured hands and swollen ankles. Those claims sit in a messy space between visible fact, partisan interpretation and internet diagnosis. What can be said with confidence is narrower. The president publicly dressed down a reporter in Palm Beach. Days earlier, footage of him moving slowly off Air Force One had already stirred fresh concern. And when a politician reaches the point where every step, turn and attempt to sit becomes part of the day's news cycle, the presidency can start to look less commanding than simply exposed.

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