Santa Fe New Mexican

Trump marriage under microscope

First lady, who has not moved to Washington, was more visible on her husband’s first foreign trip than she has ever been during his presidency

- By Krissah Thompson

As Melania Trump accompanie­d her husband on his first foreign trip, the public got an uncommon glimpse into the first couple’s dynamic. The first lady, who remained in New York when President Donald Trump moved to Washington, was more visible than she has been during any other stretch of his presidency. She strode along, usually a pace or two behind, as he greeted dignitarie­s. She stood over his shoulder as he signed guest books. She ventured out on her own a few times, primarily to meet with women and children. But her foremost job was to accompany the president.

Seeing the Trumps together over the course of their nine-day trip aroused the fascinatio­n Americans have with all White House marriages. Do they hold hands? (Not regularly.) Glance at one another lovingly or roll their eyes? (Neither, at least before the cameras.)

On the second leg of their trip, they walked down the tarmac at Israel’s Ben Gurion Internatio­nal Airport, and Trump seemed to reach back to take his wife’s hand. With a quick flick of the wrist, she seemed to swat it away. The moment, captured on video, went viral.

As they departed Israel the next day, they walked to Air Force One together hand-in-hand as photograph­ers captured the scene. This moment of connection was less commented upon than the apparent brushoff.

For months, Trump’s critics have questioned whether the first couple is happily married. Their friends insist that they are. “I will put my hand in fire and say that they are super, super happy,” said Paolo Zampolli, the Manhattan businessma­n who introduced the Trumps to each other at a New York Fashion Week party he hosted in 1998 and remains friendly with the couple.

Melania Trump has described herself as a supportive wife. “We know what our roles are and we are happy with them,” she told Parenting magazine a few years ago. “I think the mistake some people make is they try to change the man they love after they get married. You cannot change a person.”

The president, meanwhile, has repeatedly proclaimed that Melania is doing a wonderful job as first lady.

“She was always the highest quality that you’ll ever find … and I’ve known her for a long time,” he said at a news conference earlier this year.

He’s used blunter terms of praise as well. In a recent conversati­on on Air Force One, Trump boasted to a supporter that his wife is “Jackie O on steroids.”

The first couple has been married for 12 years and together for 17. The personalit­ies they’ve presented to the public have typically suggested an opposites-attract dynamic — he is impulsive and decisive, while she is quiet and cautious.

At one point during their foray abroad, they carried themselves like a couple on a double date with other world leaders. An Israeli television station’s microphone caught an exchange they shared with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and his wife.

“You know in Israel all the people like us — the media hate us but the people love us,” Sara Netanyahu told the Trumps as they met. “Like you.”

“We have a lot in common,” President Trump replied.

If every marriage is a mystery, political marriages are the twilight zone. Really, who knows what goes on in the confines of any relationsh­ip they are not a part of ? So first couples — like celebritie­s — are subject to endless analysis and interpreta­tion of their every interactio­n. They are expected to perfect the political performanc­e of marriage.

Barack and Michelle Obama’s relationsh­ip was a central part of their political story. They teased each other and held hands in public.

At times, the Obamas seemed to be performing. At a basketball game, they seemed to initially wave away the Kiss Cam when it settled on them — but later called it back and gave a smooch for the crowd.

Less showy interactio­ns between political couples may be more telling. At the Easter Egg Roll earlier this year, Melania Trump gently nudged her husband as the national anthem was played, to remind him to place his hand over his heart.

She rarely accompanie­d her husband on the campaign trail, but he referred to her as “his pollster.” Politico reported recently that the first lady continues to watch cable news and report back to her husband how she thinks his communicat­ions staff is performing.

Others who have observed the Trumps closely back home, say there is an obvious spark between them.

“When we were together at Mar-a-Lago they looked like they were on a first date,” said Zampolli, referring to a New Year’s celebratio­n he attended with the first couple. “They were quite close to each other.”

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 ?? EVAN VUCCI/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? President Donald Trump and and his wife, Melania, hold hands Tuesday as they walk from Marine One to board Air Force One, en route to Rome, in Jerusalem. On Monday on his arrival at Ben-Gurion Internatio­nal Airport, President Trump turned and reached...
EVAN VUCCI/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS President Donald Trump and and his wife, Melania, hold hands Tuesday as they walk from Marine One to board Air Force One, en route to Rome, in Jerusalem. On Monday on his arrival at Ben-Gurion Internatio­nal Airport, President Trump turned and reached...

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