Donald Trump unintentionally revealed more than planned during a recent Oval Office press briefing, after cameras caught a glimpse of notes that didn’t appear to be meant for the public.
The moment came as the president addressed reporters following the signing of a new executive order aimed at reshaping how elections are run across the U.S., specifically focusing on who will be eligible to receive mail-in ballots.
“It’s about voter integrity, we want to have honest voting in our country because if you don’t have honest voting, you can’t have really a nation,” Donald Trump said, according to UNILAD.
Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick said: “The states run these elections – if they want to use the US mail, the US Postal Service, they’re going to get a code, a bar code, from the US Postal Service and they’re going to put that on the envelope and we will have one envelope per vote.”
But while election changes were the official focus, attention quickly shifted elsewhere. Trump has long been vocal about wanting to limit postal voting, yet it was another issue entirely that appeared to dominate his notes, his proposal to build a $400 million ballroom at the White House.
Donald Trump’s notes
Earlier this week, U.S. District Judge Richard Leon intervened, temporarily halting the project. The ruling blocks “any further demolition, site preparation work, landscape alteration, excavation, foundation work, or other construction or related work, other than actions strictly necessary to ensure the safety and security of the White House and its grounds, including the ballroom construction site, and provide for the personal safety of the President and his staff.”
Leon made his stance clear, adding: “The president of the United States is the steward of the White House for future generations of First Families. He is not, however, the owner!”
Online, users were quick to dissect the situation. Many on Reddit reportedly speculated that the visible notes were a summary of the judge’s decision. “There was a judgement against it today, so it makes sense,” one person wrote on social media, according to UNILAD.
Others focused less on the content, and more on the presentation, suggesting Trump might want to rethink his choice of writing tool, with several pointing out that using a sharpie likely made the notes far easier to read on camera. The Trump administration has already appealed the ruling, despite reports that parts of the East Wing have already been demolished as part of the ballroom plans.
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