Every time Trump has made a big mess amid dementia concerns

Trump has slurred his speech several times in recent years.
On March 12, he spoke with notable verbal errors and was accused of fabricating facts during a speech for Women’s History Month.
“Since I took office, we have had more than three hundred…” he said hesitantly, trying to say “three hundred thousand.”
“Listen to this number: three hundred thousand jobs owned by proud, hard-working American women,” he added. “Jobs are coming in through the roof, and factories are being built all over the country… We’ve raised over $18 trillion in 11 months.”
The student star made a similar blunder at a White House event on February 11, where he touted himself as the “undisputed champion of coal.”
“I am proud to officially name the undisputed…” Trump uttered a rambling sentence before lapsing into several seconds of rambling speech. ‘When did this come out? Mr. Speaker.”
After appearing briefly disoriented on stage, he continued: “The undisputed champion of beautiful, clean coal.”
“We must always continue – don’t use the word coal, you know, it needs a PR job,” he added.
He then gave a speech on national television in December 2025, full of slurred, hard-to-hear words.
Trump is repeated Montreal cognitive assessments and communication errors could indicate something more serious is going on, hypothesized clinical psychologist Dr. John Gartner.
“You know, he kind of gave the game away, as he often does,” he said on an episode of The Daily Beast Podcast. “You might be able to justify giving someone the MoCA once, just based on their age, as part of a physical exam. If you give them the MoCA three times, that means you’re not assessing dementia. That means you’re monitoring dementia.”
He added: “Because if you continue to feel like he still has the symptoms, we need to see how bad he is now. We need to recheck how bad he is now. I think they are giving him cognitive tests and MRIs every six months to monitor the progress of his dementia and/or strokes.”




