Psaki Discusses Trump’s Schedule
There’s a certain irony in Jen Psaki standing at the MSNBC pulpit, speculating about Donald Trump’s whereabouts like a mystery podcaster sleuthing through a Cold War conspiracy.
This time, the former White House press secretary turned primetime pundit delivered a breathy monologue on Trump’s brief media hiatus — as if a single week off the airwaves from the most overexposed man in American politics were cause for national alarm.
Psaki opened with a critique of Trump’s Oval Office remarks, zeroing in on a moment where he allegedly flip-flopped — in under 60 seconds — on whether he had heard rumors of his own death. It’s the kind of gaffe that, if true, plays right into the media’s favorite Trump caricature: confused, chaotic, and completely unfiltered. But Psaki’s delivery, clipped and smirking, does less to enlighten and more to amuse an audience already primed to sneer.
Jen Psaki does an entire segment claiming that Donald Trump is hiding something about his health because he took a few days off on a holiday weekend.
This is the same woman who was Joe Biden’s Press Secretary. pic.twitter.com/TUv3i2Esyv
— Greg Price (@greg_price11) September 3, 2025
Then comes the pivot — a classic move. Rather than chase down facts about why Trump took a step back from media hits, Psaki jumps to speculation: maybe he’s hiding. Maybe he’s embarrassed. Maybe he’s scared.
Of what, exactly? That part’s fuzzy. The real punch comes when she links Trump’s supposed media silence to polling — specifically, a Wall Street Journal poll showing that only 25% of Americans believe their standard of living will improve. It’s a striking number, to be sure, but one that seems curiously disconnected from the man Psaki is attempting to skewer.
Because here’s the twist: that poll isn’t a referendum on Trump. It’s a reflection of the national mood — under Biden.
Colbert has to rein in his audience after they start booing news that Trump is still alive: “No! We like our presidents alive.” pic.twitter.com/ICyhzLOIc3
— Tom Elliott (@tomselliott) September 3, 2025
Americans are pessimistic, yes. They’re anxious. They’re watching inflation erode their paychecks and housing costs devour their dreams of homeownership. But to use that poll as evidence that Trump is ducking the public eye? That’s a sleight of hand. If anything, it underscores why Trump continues to poll competitively despite media frenzies and courtroom dramas: the country feels worse off now, not then.
