Daily Mail

Trump’s day: An 11am start, 5 hours’ work ... then TV and Twitter

- From Daniel Bates in New York

DonalD Trump turns up for work in the oval office at 11am and sometimes finishes at 4pm, leaked schedules reveal.

It means the President, 71, can put in just five hours including breaks for ‘executive time’ – the term used for when he is tweeting, watching cable TV and venting his rage in phone calls to friends.

The revelation­s raise more questions about his fitness for office as he struggles with the fallout from Michael Wolff’s book Fire and Fury: Inside the Trump White House.

The schedules of the President’s turned up between 9am and working day were 10am but would usually read obtained by US politics website briefing papers on his own later axios and differ from those into the night. which were previously made axios highlighte­d three days available to the media. this week including today when

They suggest Mr Trump Mr Trump has his first meeting sometimes works for fewer at 11am, followed by executive than three hours a day. time, lunch, more executive

His 11am start is far later time, then another meeting. than George W Bush who usually Tomorrow Mr Trump has an arrived in the oval office 11am intelligen­ce briefing, with at 6.45am. Barack obama his last official duty at 4pm. on Thursday he has policy time at 11am followed by executive time. The relaxed schedule is all the more damning because Mr Trump is an early riser. He sleeps for four hours and sometimes tweets before 7am.

White House press secretary Sarah Sanders insisted the President’s day begins at 8am when he makes official phone calls before coming down to the oval office from his living quarters. Mr Wolff’s devastatin­g book suggested Mr Trump was an impulsive ‘child’ who was unfit to be President.

In response Mr Trump compared himself to former President Ronald Reagan who also had to put up with unflatteri­ng books. But Mr Reagan deflected attacks with humour, once saying: ‘It’s true hard work never killed anybody, but I figure, why take the chance?’

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