'Strikingly erratic' Trump's latest 'confusing sentences' dissected by Washington Post
The Washington Post has delivered a lengthy analysis of former President Donald Trump's most recent speeches and has found that they are "strikingly erratic" and filled with "confusing sentences."
The Post reports that while Trump has long been famous for going on long-winded digressions during speeches, his most recent speeches "have gotten longer and more repetitive compared with those of past campaigns.
The Post's analysis also finds that he "promotes falsehoods and theories that are so far removed from reality or appear wholly made up that they are often baffling to anyone not steeped in MAGA media or internet memes."
The Post notes that these speech patterns are particularly problematic given that Trump at 78 years old would be the oldest person to ever be elected president, even eclipsing President Joe Biden in 2020.
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What's more, adds the Post, Trump hasn't released any of his medical records.
"The most detailed account of his health came in a January 2019 briefing from White House physician Ronny Jackson, who later resigned under allegations he drank on the job and mistreated subordinates; he now represents a Texas district in Congress," the report states. "His successor, Sean Conley, gave public accounts of Trump’s health that were rosier than reality when the then-president contracted covid-19 shortly before the 2020 election."
Trump campaign spokesman Steven Cheung, however, dismissed fears about Trump's cognitive decline and described him as "the greatest orator in political history" whose "patented Weave is a brilliant method to convey important stories and explain policies that will help everyday Americans turn the page from the last four years of Kamala Harris’s failures."