President Donald Trump appeared confused and unaware during a leaders’ photoshoot at the G7 summit in France, where he traveled after celebrating his 80th birthday on June 14, 2026, according to fresh reports from the international gathering that have intensified concerns about his mental acuity and stamina.
The president appeared unusually tired and subdued during several public events at the summit, observers noted. On the closing day, President Trump told G7 leaders “I’m the boss” in a tongue-in-cheek comment that was met with laughter. He also jokingly asked if media could stay for the closed-door G7 meeting, saying “It’s ok with me,” before they were ushered out.
The summit appearance came as a damaging New York Times report detailed private concerns among White House insiders about his mental acuity and physical stamina. The milestone of becoming only the second sitting president in American history to reach his 80s in office was overshadowed by the report published on his birthday.
Allies close to President Trump have witnessed him forgetting people’s names and appearing more tired than usual during private interactions. Already the oldest person ever inaugurated to the office, the president has been visibly uncomfortable with discussions of his advancing age.
That discomfort was on full display on June 10 when President Trump called Dr. Mehmet Oz to invite him to his birthday celebration. “You don’t have to wish me a happy birthday, because I’m not happy about that birthday,” President Trump told Oz, who serves as administrator of the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services. “It’s a number that I never thought really too much about. It’s not a number I like, but I’m here nonetheless.”
Medical Examination Raises Questions
A team of 22 medical specialists recently examined the president at the Walter Reed National Military Medical Center in Bethesda, Maryland—the highest number of specialists ever present at a single presidential examination, according to a Washington Post analysis. The president’s 2025 checkup involved just 14 doctors, making this year’s examination nearly double in scope.
Dr. Sean Barbabella, one of the president’s physicians, reported that President Trump underwent an echocardiogram and ultrasound of the heart following increased cardiovascular testing last year. The president has been diagnosed with chronic venous insufficiency, a condition where veins struggle to push blood back to the heart, which has resulted in visibly swollen ankles. He takes two medications to lower his low-density lipoprotein (LDL) cholesterol levels.
Dark, purplish bruises frequently visible on President Trump’s hands have been attributed by the White House to a high-dose aspirin regimen and excessive handshaking.
President Trump has claimed to use artificial intelligence to assess his biological age, but Dr. Eric Topol, a cardiologist who specializes in aging, expressed skepticism about such claims. “There is no tool for using A.I. to make that kind of a statement that is accepted in the cardiology community,” Dr. Topol told the Times.
Biographer Says President Refuses Age Discussions
Michael Wolff, President Trump’s longtime biographer, told the “Inside Trump’s Head” podcast on June 13 that the president has refused to let aides address concerns about his age, even as staffers attempted to develop messaging strategies to counter public worries about his mental fitness—particularly in light of the earlier controversy over former President Joe Biden’s cognitive abilities.
“Trump completely cut that off. Cut this person dead. No discussion of this,” Wolff said, adding that the president now deflects to the 250th birthday of the United States instead. “That’s the birthday that counts. That’s the birthday they should be thinking about. Anything not to have people thinking about his 80th birthday.”
White House communications director Steven Cheung dismissed Wolff’s account with characteristic aggression, calling the author “a lying sack of ***” and claiming he “routinely fabricates stories originating from his sick and warped imagination.”
Tucker Carlson, a former Fox News host and onetime Trump ally who broke with the president in recent months, told the Times that the president is deeply uncomfortable with turning 80.
Psychiatrist Warns of “Frightening Progression”
Dr. Henry Abraham, a former psychiatry professor at Tufts University and chief signatory of a letter to Congress warning about President Trump’s perceived cognitive decline, told AlterNet on May 15 that he has observed a “frightening progression of symptoms.”
New York Times reporter Katie Rogers noted that a Reuters/Ipsos poll taken in February showed nearly six in ten Americans believe President Trump is growing more erratic. Rahm Emanuel, who served as chief of staff to President Barack Obama, told the Times that an 80-year-old lacks the necessary physical and mental stamina for the presidency.
Since his second term began, President Trump has exhibited numerous lapses in speech and been caught on camera appearing drowsy during official events. On June 7, clips of the president with his eyes closed at an Oval Office event went viral, prompting the White House’s rapid response team to angrily defend him on social media.
Carlson described President Trump’s push for a controversial $400 million White House ballroom as an “older man building a monument to himself.”
To mark his 80th birthday, President Trump hosted an Ultimate Fighting Championship (UFC) event on the White House South Lawn on June 14, then departed for a diplomatic summit in France—a schedule the Times suggested was designed to project stamina and deflect age concerns. President Trump is only three years younger than former President Biden, whom he has mocked for years as “Sleepy Joe.”
Publicly, the White House has maintained a defiant posture. Spokesman Davis Ingle previously told The Daily Beast that “President Trump’s sharpness, unmatched energy, and historic accessibility stand in stark contrast to what we saw during the last administration.”










