The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Glowing report from Trump doctor begs some questions

- Gail Collins

Donald Trump has passed his mental test. This may come as either a relief or a shock.

The results of the president’s physical exam came out this week. This is normally not a big deal — when Obama and Bush got their reports, it was barely a yawn. But on Tuesday, White House physician Ronny Jackson had to answer questions from the media for almost an hour.

There was a little curiosity about how anybody who eats so many cheeseburg­ers could be in good health. (“Genes.”) Skeptics pointed out that the report’s enthusiast­ic descriptio­ns of the president’s tip-top condition seemed inconsiste­nt with some of the statistics on his weight and plaque buildup in the arteries.

If the doctor had simply said “good for an overweight 71-year-old guy,” everybody probably could have nodded and moved forward.

But the big news was the mental test. Trump took the Montreal Cognitive Assessment and got a perfect score. Not perhaps the highest bar possible, unless you were concerned about whether he can identify pictures of animals and draw hands on a clock. But the test can be useful if there is, for some reason, concern that the subject is suffering from ... um, dementia.

“Amazing report, cognitive & otherwise,” cheered Donald Trump Jr. Have we ever before had a First Child rallying the troops around the president passing a mental test?

But about the president’s mental report. It didn’t measure judgment, and there was no score to indicate whether the test-taker would, if faced with a question of what to do about immigratio­n policy, change his position 12 times in 24 hours. Whether he would confide to several million Twitter followers that the country “needs a good shutdown”? Whether he thinks of himself as a “very stable genius”?

Maybe Jackson could have given him a passing grade without going so far over the deep end. Something like: “Identified the camel picture, and no problems you could lock him up for.”

When we think about presidents losing their mental grip, we generally go back to Woodrow Wilson, who had a stroke in 1919 that left him bedridden and pretty much off the playing field. “Wilson was the worst case of presidenti­al disability,” said John Cooper, a Wilson expert at the University of Wisconsin. The stroke was followed by other physical ailments and a long period of isolation under the protection of his wife, who some claimed was taking over the presidency. It left Wilson’s cognitive function unimpaired, Cooper said, “but it warped his judgment horribly.”

OK, cognitive function unimpaired ... horrible judgment. Hmm.

This has no relation to our current situation, and it’s hard to see Melania trying to take control of the government. Although Ivanka ...

And there were certainly presidents who seemed to deteriorat­e mentally while in office. Ronald Reagan, who later succumbed to Alzheimer’s disease, was extremely forgetful in his second term. Reagan, however, did not Twitter.

So here we are. Our current president is in OK physical condition and has “absolutely no cognitive or mental issues whatsoever.” The doctor says so. And really, he’s doing better than Woodrow Wilson and everything’s fine, unless you count a terrible attention deficit disorder and rampant narcissism as mental issues. If so, they don’t come up on that test with the camel.

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