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Melania Trump Has Spent Fewer than 14 Days at the White House Since Her Husband's Inauguration, Report Claims

Melania Trump Has Spent Fewer than 14 Days at the White House Since Her Husband's Inauguration, Report Claims

Yahoo08-05-2025

First lady Melania Trump has not been a central figure in her husband's second term as president, according to new reporting from The New York Times.
The outlet claims that President Donald Trump's wife has spent fewer than 14 days at the White House since her husband took office in January, with some sources even calling that estimate generous.
Katherine Jellison, a historian and first lady expert, told the Times: 'We haven't seen such a low-profile first lady since Bess Truman, and that's going way back in living human memory, nearly 80 years ago.'
Melania has made a handful of political appearances during Donald's second term.
She spoke out against cyberbullying and revenge pornography during a congressional roundtable in early March and presented honors during the International Women of Courage Awards in April. She also attended the White House Easter Egg Roll.
The president and first lady traveled together to attend the funeral of Pope Francis in Rome on April 26, which happened to fall on Melania's 55th birthday. However, as a practicing Catholic, sources said she was 'honored' to celebrate the late religious leader.
"She respected the pope," a social source told PEOPLE at the time. "It is a sad time for Catholics around the world, and the first lady is honored to go to the funeral."
Melania's absence from Washington, D.C., isn't a change of pace from Donald's first term, when she spent ample time at Trump Tower in Manhattan so as not to disrupt their son Barron's school schedule.
Prior to her husband's second term, Melania was clear about her plans to split time between the White House, their Mar-a-Lago estate in Florida, and New York City, as Barron started his freshman year at NYU.
"I will be in the White House. And when I need to be in New York, I will be in New York. When I need to be in Palm Beach, I will be in Palm Beach,' she said in a Jan. 13 interview on Fox & Friends. 'My first priority is to be a mom, to be a first lady, to be a wife."
Unlike more politically active recent first ladies like Michelle Obama and Dr. Jill Biden, Melania has seemingly always planned to be a hands-off presidential spouse.
Never miss a story — sign up for to stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer.
In February, a longtime social source told PEOPLE that the former model 'couldn't care less how she looks politically.'
'She doesn't believe she has obligations in the political world," the source added.
Read the original article on People

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Reactions to Padilla incident fall mostly along party lines
Reactions to Padilla incident fall mostly along party lines

Los Angeles Times

timean hour ago

  • Los Angeles Times

Reactions to Padilla incident fall mostly along party lines

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Pray on this and do the right thing.' Members of the Congressional Hispanic Caucus went to Speaker Mike Johnson's office to protest Padilla's treatment. Sen. Cory Booker (D-N.J.) spoke out on X and on the floor of the Senate. He said the episode fit into 'a pattern of behavior by the Trump administration. There is simply no justification for this abuse of authority …. There can be no justification of seeing a senator forced to their knees.' Rep. Joaquin Castro (D-Texas) went on X to repeat the call for an investigation and to say that 'Republican leadership is complicit in enabling the growing authoritarianism in this country.' Most Republicans remained silent, or accused Padilla of being a provocateur. 'I think the senator's actions, my view is, it was wildly inappropriate,' said Johnson, the House speaker. 'You don't charge a sitting Cabinet secretary.' Johnson added that it was Padilla, who should face some sanction. 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Noem did not back off her earlier statement that Padilla had 'burst' into the room. 'Senator Padilla chose disrespectful political theatre and interrupted a live press conference without identifying himself or having his Senate security pin on as he lunged toward Secretary Noem,' Tricia McLaughlin, an assistant Homeland Security secretary, said in a statement Friday. McLaughlin also said that Padilla 'was told repeatedly to back away and did not comply with officers' repeated commands,' though video made public by Friday did not show such warnings, in advance of Padilla's first statement. The senator's staff members said he privately had received messages of concern from several Republican colleagues, including Sen. Tim Sheehy (R-Mont.) Speaking publicly only one Republican lawmaker sounded a note of distress about the episode. 'I've seen that one clip. It's horrible,' said Sen. Lisa Murkowski (R-Alaska). 'It is shocking at every level. It's not the America I know.' 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NY Times reporter walks back post about 'randomness' of Israeli strikes on Iran
NY Times reporter walks back post about 'randomness' of Israeli strikes on Iran

Yahoo

time2 hours ago

  • Yahoo

NY Times reporter walks back post about 'randomness' of Israeli strikes on Iran

A New York Times reporter walked back her X post after facing backlash for suggesting that Israeli strikes on Iran randomly hit residential neighborhoods. "A friend in Tehran sent me this video, apartment complex housing university professors attacked directly across the street from her house," Farnaz Fassihi, United Nations bureau chief for The New York Times, said in a Friday X post. "The randomness of strikes in residential neighborhoods have terrified Iranians," she added. Trump Faces Critical Decision As Middle East Teeters On Brink Of War On Thursday, the Israeli Defense Forces (IDF) launched extensive strikes on Iran's military infrastructure and nuclear program, killing Commander-in-Chief of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) Hossein Salami and the country's chief of staff of the armed forces, Gen. Mohammad Bagheri. While Fassihi called the strikes random, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has said the strikes were targeted, writing in a Thursday X post that, "Moments ago, Israel launched Operation 'Rising Lion', a targeted military operation to roll back the Iranian threat to Israel's very survival. This operation will continue for as many days as it takes to remove this threat." Read On The Fox News App In a later post on Friday, Fassihi said, "About my tweet yesterday, I meant to say the sense of randomness caused by the strikes in residential neighborhoods has terrified Iranians. As we've reported, Israel has said the strikes are targeted." Fassihi faced strong pushback on X at first for suggesting the strikes were random. She eventually prevented users from replying to the post, although people could still "quote" the post and comment on it. Podcaster and writer Stephen Miller posted on X, "There is absolutely nothing random about these strikes but that doesn't stop New York Times reporters. Comments off." Israel Releases Video Of Strike On Iranian Ballistic Missiles Aimed At Jewish State Guy Benson, Townhall political editor, also took to X to address Fassihi's post, saying, "Using the word 'randomness' to describe the precision of what is happening is quite a choice." Noah Rothman, a senior writer at National Review Online, said, "Look. Nobody likes it when their city is bombed. But in the light of day, amid evidence of the surgical precision with which Israel targeted regime figures, many of whom are not exactly beloved, the Iranian public's perspective should be expected to evolve." Radio host Tony Katz said her post did not live up to journalistic standards. "This is not journalism," Katz said. "This is propaganda." In a statement to Fox News Digital, The New York Times said that it is "aggressively reporting on Israel's strikes on Iran, one of the most oppressive countries for journalists to access in order to report and verify facts in breaking news moments." The paper added, "One of the ways we provide insight into what's happening with the rest of the world is to share videos taken by people on the ground, including their perspectives."Original article source: NY Times reporter walks back post about 'randomness' of Israeli strikes on Iran

Newsom tries to give Trump the Biden treatment, says he's ‘not all there'
Newsom tries to give Trump the Biden treatment, says he's ‘not all there'

New York Post

time3 hours ago

  • New York Post

Newsom tries to give Trump the Biden treatment, says he's ‘not all there'

California Gov. Gavin Newsom said President Donald Trump had seemingly lost a step mentally in a new interview, in an unmistakable comparison to former President Joe Biden. During an episode of The New York Times' 'The Daily' podcast published Thursday, the Democratic governor accused Trump of being 'not all there,' saying that the president's been making up a different reality than what is actually going on with the federal government's response to the unrest in Los Angeles. 'And he's not all there. I mean that,' Newsom told Times podcast host Michael Barbaro, who seemed to be stunned by the description. As Newsom told it, Trump's behavior regarding the riots has been erratic and unhinged. 'Then I talked to the president. Hours later, to your point, I wake up, and I'm Newscum again,' he said, referencing a nickname Trump has called the governor on multiple occasions. 'Wow,' Barbaro replied. 3 President Donald Trump and first lady Melania Trump greet guests during the congressional picnic on the South Lawn of the White House, Thursday, June 12, 2025, in Washington. AP 'Yeah, it's the President of the United States calling someone scum, Newscum, which is, for what it's worth, what I think a seventh grader used to call me on Baltimore Street in Corte Madera, California,' Newsom continued. 'He begins the day with that, and then talks about the National Guard, and then starts making up all these things he claimed he told me about, which honestly starts to disturb me on a different level that maybe he actually believed he said those things.' When Barbaro prompted him to clarify his 'not all there' claim, the governor replied, 'I don't know. Honestly, he literally a few days later talked about a conversation he had with me after he announced his 700 U.S. Marines to be deployed for domestic law enforcement in the United States of America. That's blatantly against [the] law. He claimed he had another conversation with me.' 3 Gavin Newsom holds a press conference after US federal Judge Charles Breyer halted US President Trump's deployment of California Guard soldiers in Los Angeles in San Francisco, California, USA, 12 June 2025. JOHN G MABANGLO/EPA-EFE/Shutterstock In another interview, Newsom told Fox LA that Trump has 'lost it' and is not the same person he was four years ago. However, Newsom had no reservations about former President Biden's mental fitness when even Democratic figures were calling it out. After Biden's disastrous debate with Trump last summer, Newsom rejected the idea that Biden should step away from re-election, telling CBS News, 'I'm all in, no daylight.' Last year on 'Meet the Press,' Newsom said he'd seen Biden up close and said his age was what made him successful. 3 President Joe Biden speaks to reporters in Nantucket, Mass., on Friday, Nov. 24, 2023, about hostages freed by Hamas in the first stage of a swap under a four-day cease-fire deal. AP Biden's mental decline in office has been a hot topic since he left office, coming to a head last month after the book 'Original Sin' outlined alarming examples while he was still president. Trump, who turns 79 on Saturday, will break Biden's record as the oldest president ever by the end of his second term. Newsom and Trump have been feuding over the president's response to the LA riots that began after Immigration and Customs Enforcement operations commenced downtown last week. Trump ordered the U.S. National Guard and subsequently 700 U.S. Marines into the city to support local law enforcement. Newsom spoke out against the actions, calling them a 'brazen abuse of power' during a televised address on Tuesday night. Democrats have claimed Trump exacerbated the situation to benefit himself politically. The White House did not immediately reply to Fox News Digital's request for comment.

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