Donald Trump’s administration has gone to great lengths to spin his first year back in the White House as one of the best and most productive in US history, but as a new analysis from The Guardian laid out, his “erratic and at times confused behavior throughout 2025” has often dominated the conversation, and “questions about his mental and physical performance.”
Trump is currently 79-years-old and is officially the oldest individual ever elected to the US presidency. While Trump in 2024 went to great lengths to attack Joe Biden’s age and the signs that his ability to hold the job was deteriorating, many of the same concerns have now come to haunt his second term.
As The Guardian points out from the jump, Trump’s behaviors during widely publicized meetings offered some of the more prominent and headline-generating examples of his seeming decline, both physically and mentally.
“Trump has appeared to fall asleep during some meetings,” the analysis explained. “Amid others, he has drifted off-topic, launching into bizarre segues on interior decor or about whales and birds. His public appearances have lacked focus, and he has used speeches to ramble about how Barack Obama walks down stairs, or to invent stories about the Unabomber.”
The last point referred to a digression Trump made in July, where he claimed that his late uncle, John Trump, had taught the Unabomber, Ted Kaczynski, at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, and claimed that his uncle often talked about what kind of student he had been. As The Guardian noted, “that cannot possibly be true,” as Kazcynski never studied at MIT, and John Trump died in 1985, 11 years before he was identified by authorities as the Unabomber.
The White House and Trump’s Republican allies have responded to these concerns with impassioned defenses of his fitness, “often in hyperbolic terms.” A representative for the White House told The Guardian earlier this year that Trump’s “mental sharpness is second to none,” while his former White House doctor, Rep. Ronny Jackson, claimed that he was the “healthiest president this nation has ever seen.”
Democrats hope to make Trump’s declining physical and mental state a central message in the 2026 midterm elections, and The Guardian argued that they would “have a fair amount of ammunition” to do so.
“Earlier this year, Trump mixed up Albania with Armenia when discussing a peace deal involving the latter; discussing autism in a speech at the White House, he mused about ‘certain elements of genius that can be given to a baby,’” the analysis laid out. “Announcing that 13 grants would be awarded to investigate autism, Trump added: ‘Nothing bad can happen, it can only good happen.’”
During the same address about autism, Trump also stumbled over his pronunciation of the drug, acetaminophen, a gaffe relentlessly lampooned on late-night comedy shows.
A few of his more recent outbursts have seen Trump speak “without inhibition,” leading to comments that alarm and disgust even his most ardent supporters.
“In December alone, he declared Somali immigrants to be ‘garbage’ and, in a move that shocked even some Republicans, essentially blamed Rob Reiner for his own death,” The Guardian explained.
The post Questions about Trump’s ‘mental and physical performance’ dominate his first year back appeared first on Raw Story.




