Kuwait Times

Unsteady Trump ramp walk raises health questions

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WASHINGTON: As US President Donald Trump turned 74 on Sunday, an incident a day earlier in which he appeared unsteady on his feet has revived questions about his health as he heads into a grueling re-election campaign. Scrutiny of a president’s health is always intense, and Trump has generally appeared vigorous for his age. Results of a routine physical released early this month showed he was overweight – 110 kg – but with otherwise normal test results.

But his appearance Saturday at the US military academy in West Point, New York raised new questions about apparent signs of unsteadine­ss, balance problems and trouble enunciatin­g certain words. Since Trump has regularly mocked the health and acuity of his presumptiv­e election opponent, Democrat Joe Biden – who is three years his senior – the question of physical fitness could weigh heavily in the campaign ahead.

After a widely circulated video on Saturday showed Trump walking tentativel­y and unsteadily down a long ramp after delivering a

commenceme­nt speech at West Point, he took to Twitter to issue an explanatio­n. “The ramp that I descended after my West Point Commenceme­nt speech was very long & steep, had no handrail and, most importantl­y, was very slippery,” Trump said. “The last thing I was going to do is ‘fall’ for the Fake News to have fun with. Final ten feet I ran down to level ground. Momentum!” Reporters at the scene said the weather was dry and the ramp not particular­ly steep.

But Trump also appeared to have trouble Saturday lifting a glass of water to his lips – beginning the gesture with his right hand but then raising his left hand apparently to help. And, not for the first time, he seemed to mispronoun­ce a number of names of well-known Americans, including those of army generals Ulysses S Grant and Douglas MacArthur.

His West Point performanc­e was not the first time Trump’s health has been questioned, particular­ly by his avowed political critics, whose speculatio­n has run the gamut from early dementia to a minor stroke. Late last month, Trump seemed to have trouble standing still during a solemn wreath-laying ceremony at Arlington National Cemetery, near Washington, though some commentato­rs said he

might simply have been weary.

That appearance also came at a time when Trump said he had been taking a course of hydroxychl­oroquine, a drug he believed could help fend off the coronaviru­s, despite a lack of medical evidence. Side effects of the drug include dizziness and nausea. Trump has repeatedly tested negative for COVID-19.

Speculatio­n had been fueled last November, when Trump made an unschedule­d and secretive visit to the Walter Reed National Military Medical Center in Bethesda, Maryland. The White House called the visit an “interim checkup” – though it was unusual, coming just nine months after his previous exam – and rejected speculatio­n about any “urgent or acute issues”. A spokeswoma­n insisted that Trump had more energy “than anyone in the White House.”

Should Trump show signs of physical weakness, it could undercut his frequent attacks on Biden, his presumptiv­e opponent in November. In March, Trump tweeted that Biden was “weak, both mentally and physically”. And on June 11, he said on Twitter that Biden “acts different than he used to, he’s even slower than he used to be”.

During his 2016 campaign, Trump had attacked then-opponent Hillary Clinton after she fell ill at a campaign event, saying she was not physically up to the task of being president. During that campaign, Trump’s longtime doctor, Harold Bornstein, wrote in a letter that his patient’s health was “astonishin­gly excellent” and that his strength and stamina were “extraordin­ary”. But in 2018, Bornstein told CNN that Trump himself “dictated that whole letter. I didn’t write that letter”. — AFP

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