Allies Laugh at Trump Behind His Back During Bizarre Phone Call
By
58pumkinrider
1d ago
Source
rougemag.squarespace.comAllies Laugh at Trump Behind His Back During Bizarre Phone Callsquarespace.comNATURE CALLS - The Problem With Fat Foxes… “The officials in the room were barely able to contain themselves because it was so funny.” The U.K.’s top officials struggled to contain their laughter after President Donald Trump used his first phone call with the prime minister to raise an unexpected concern: fat foxes. The former chief of staff to British Prime Minister Keir Starmer revealed an amusing anecdote from the pair’s first call that left officials battling to keep a straight face. “So the first call that Keir had with the president, he got into a conversation about windmills,” Morgan McSweeney told the BBC. While Trump, 80, has frequently criticized Britain’s embrace of offshore wind farms and repeatedly urged Starmer, 63, to ditch clean energy in favor of fossil fuel extraction, what he said next was something U.K. government officials never saw coming. “Then he started saying, ‘The windmills are killing your birds. The birds are falling around the windmills, and the foxes are eating those birds,’” McSweeney recalled Trump telling Starmer. Trump apparently went on to claim that the foxes had become lazy after feeding on the birds and had grown so overweight that “people no longer knew what kind of creature they were because they were too fat.” “At that point, the officials in the room were barely able to contain themselves because it was so funny,” McSweeney said, adding that everyone was determined to remain “professional” given that it was the first phone call between the two world leaders. While wind turbines do result in some bird fatalities, studies consistently show they kill far fewer birds per unit of electricity generated than fossil fuel energy sources, which Trump has repeatedly recommended Britain should rely on instead. Despite Trump’s concerns, there is no empirical evidence to suggest that foxes in the U.K. are becoming larger. The White House did not immediately respond to a request for comment. “We thought, ‘This is going to be so, so very, very different,’” Starmer’s former chief of staff said, reflecting on expectations around Trump’s presidency and U.K.–U.S. relations. Since returning to office, the president has repeatedly posted, and reposted, on Truth Social at all hours of the night. He often appears to doze off during public events in the late afternoon, including in the Oval Office, at round tables and during Cabinet meetings at the White House. A Daily Beast analysis of the last three months reveals that Trump, who turned 80 last month, was only seen in public three times in Washington, D.C., before 11 a.m. in the entire month of June. The Beast’s review of the president’s schedule and White House pool reports shows that while the president had some public events in the 11 a.m. hour and early afternoon, the vast majority of his appearances took place in the late afternoon. The only time he was spotted in the morning was during the three days he was out of the country. The Beast’s analysis showed that the president’s official schedule listed “Executive Time” starting at 8 a.m. on 26 of the 30 days of June. Any public policy meetings or appearances took place later in the day, if at all. Trump was also not seen in public before 11 a.m. on most days in May. He had designated “Executive Time” on 26 mornings in May and every single day of April at 8 a.m., according to his public schedule. Since returning to office, the president has repeatedly posted, and reposted, on Truth Social at all hours of the night. He often appears to doze off during public events in the late afternoon, including in the Oval Office, at round tables and during Cabinet meetings at the White House. Trump’s bizarre nocturnal habits and use of “Executive Time” to catch up on sleep in his second term were exposed in the book Regime Change: Inside the Imperial Presidency of Donald Trump by White House Correspondents Maggie Haberman and Jonathan Swan. “Occasionally,” the pair wrote, “aides couldn’t reach him during the hours between eight and ten, when they soon came to realize meant he had stayed up all night, on the phone or watching television or both, only to finally catch some sleep around four or five in the morning.” On one such “late morning,” they reported no one had heard from Trump and his team was unable to reach him. In the end, “an aide checked on the President only to find that he was still asleep in the residence.” The book also revealed that as Trump remains a “night owl,” he and first lady Melania sleep in separate bedrooms at the White House. Our review of Trump’s schedule showed the only time Trump was spotted in D.C. in the morning before 11 a.m. in the entire month of June was last weekend. On Saturday, his motorcade departed the White House for his Trump National Golf Club at 9:43 a.m. On Sunday, the White House pool reported his visit to Lafayette Park around 8:30 a.m., while his aide Margo Martin posted a short video of it. He then went to the Haines Point golf course on the Potomac, which he plans to tear up, and arrived at his own Virginia golf club at 11:41 a.m. The president’s three-day visit to France to attend the G7 summit of world leaders from June 15 to June 17, was the other exception to his MIA mornings. The president was otherwise kept from public view before 11 a.m. every single day of June. The only White House event publicly scheduled for the morning in June was delayed. On June 10, the president’s public schedule stated he would sign the Secure America Act at 10 a.m. That event was delayed by more than an hour, and reporters were brought in at 11:17 a.m. On June 11, he called into Fox & Friends at 8 a.m., but was not seen on camera. Other than that, the first half of Trump’s day is usually described officially as “Executive Time” starting at 8 a.m. There are also claims of “policy meetings” starting at 11 a.m, but none are open to the media. An example of how “Executive Time” shows up on the president’s official White House schedule. This was the schedule for June 24, before the president canceled the noon bill signing.White House Even events at noon are rare. On Wednesday, June 24, Trump had been scheduled to sign the bipartisan housing bill on Capitol Hill at noon. But the president canceled it in a Truth Social post sent shortly before 11.a.m., blindsiding Republicans on the Hill who had a stage set up in Statuary Hall, ready for him to sign it. In the end, he made it to Capitol Hill to attend the Republican Senate luncheon just after 1 p.m. and stayed for about an hour. Asked for comment on the president remaining largely behind closed doors and away from the public gaze in the mornings, the White House did not address his schedule but copied and pasted a quote previously sent to the Huffington Post about Trump falling asleep in a meeting. “President Trump’s sharpness, unmatched energy, and historic accessibility stand in stark contrast to what we saw during the last administration, when Democrats and the legacy media like the failing Huffington Post intentionally covered up Joe Biden’s serious mental and physical decline from the American people,” spokesman Davis Ingle said. Commander Yo-Se-Mite Ingle, 32, is a communications graduate of Florida’s Southeastern University, where his father, Kent Ingle, is president. The White House also ignored the Daily Beast’s questions about what “Executive Time” actually means. Trump has at times posted on Truth Social during that “Executive Time,” including posts that respond in close to real time to what is being shown on cable news, but even posts like these were rare in June. Executive Time has been included in the president’s public schedule since his first term as unstructured time for the president to spend as he pleases. In May, Trump had “Executive Time” on his schedule 26 out of 31 days. He had morning appearances before 11 a.m. on 11 days that month. Four were to play golf, while three took place during his visit to China, the Daily Beast review found. It means there were only four days in May when Trump appeared publicly before 11 a.m., in Washington, D.C. At 10:25 a.m. on May 19, he walked outside the White House to show off the construction of his ballroom. The next day, he flew to Connecticut to deliver a commencement address at the Coast Guard Academy. On May 5, he was set to sign a proclamation at 10:30 a.m., but it started almost half an hour late. He was also on the road early on May 26 to visit Walter Reed Military Medical Center for his annual physical, where 22 specialists consulted on the president’s health before his doctor deemed him in excellent health, to widespread skepticism and mockery. In April, Trump had “Executive Time” at 8 a.m. every day. While the president had a handful of phone interviews in the morning that month, he emerged for public events only six times before 11 a.m. One of those was a disaster: On April 1, Trump traveled to the Supreme Court bright and early to catch the first part of oral arguments in the birthright citizenship case before departing halfway through. He lost humiliatingly. Trump was seen in public when he went to the Supreme Court to see his own solicitor general, D. John Sauer, bomb in front of the justices as they heard his birthright citizenship case.Dana Verkouteren/AP He was also spotted out early on April 2 for the Easter Egg Roll, which was set to begin at 10 a.m. Trump did not appear on the Truman Balcony until 10:48 a.m. That Saturday, he made it out in the morning to go to his golf club and on April 18, he ushered the press into the Oval Office at just after 9 a.m. to sign executive orders. One of President Donald Trump's few public morning appearances in April was when he and first lady Melania Trump greeted Britain’s King Charles III on the South Lawn of the White House on April 28, 2026. But after that, it was more than a week before the president had another morning event. That was to greet King Charles at the White House on April 28, where the ceremony began late—at just before 11 a.m.
You might also wanna read
Trump officials warn Ed Miliband ‘would be a mistake’ as chancellor
The Independent·7h ago

Financial Times columnist describes 'very strange' phone call with Trump during Iran war
Financial Times columnist Ed Luce recounts a "very strange" phone call with Donald Trump that he made at his editor's request around the sta
rawstory.com·6d agoSatirical Piece: Trump Demands Allies Share Burden in Global Affairs
The article satirically portrays President Donald Trump demanding that U.S. allies contribute more to global problems, claiming the U.S. bea

Is Donald Trump going to (accidentally?) save the world?! What is going on?

Fox's Brian Kilmeade Claims Trump Got 'Mixed' Reception at Knicks Game Despite Loud Booing
Fox News host Brian Kilmeade defended President Donald Trump on Fox & Friends, claiming that Trump's reception at a Knicks game at Madison S
Lawmakers propose banning all U.S.-Chinese research collaborations
science.org·1mo ago

Comments
Sign in to join the conversation.
No comments yet. Be the first.