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President Donald Trump arrived at the U.N. General Assembly to find both a malfunctioning escalator and a teleprompter, and he used these mishaps as a means to criticize the United Nations.
The president made his appearance Tuesday morning at the U.N.’s Manhattan headquarters, accompanied by First Lady Melania Trump, who was dressed in a cream suit with a caramel top.
He acknowledged reporters with a ‘thank you’ and proceeded toward an escalator with his entourage leading the way for his important speech. A short while later, he was seen following the first lady, wearing her tall heels, up the steps because the escalator had come to a halt.
Once the president got to the podium in the assembly hall, he realized the teleprompter was broken.
‘I can only say whoever is operating this teleprompter is in big trouble,’ he chuckled.
He had already planned to criticize the international body, but the back-to-back screw-ups provided him fresh fodder.
‘All I got from the United Nations was an escalator on the way up that stopped in the middle,’ Trump said. ‘If the first lady wasn’t in great shape, she would’ve fallen.’
Trump, again, boasted about the many conflicts he claims he’s put an end to. On Tuesday, he blasted the U.N. for not trying to help with any of them.

President Donald Trump used a broken teleprompter and a broken escalator to say how useless the United Nations is

President Donald Trump (left) and First Lady Melania Trump (right) boarded an escalator at the U.N. that promptly broke
‘I ended seven wars, dealt with leaders of each country, and never even received a call from the UN offering to help in finalizing the deal,’ Trump complained.
‘The United Nations wasn’t there for us. They weren’t there. I thought of it after the fact, not during these negotiations…what is the purpose of the UN? It’s not even coming close to living up to that potential,’ he added.
The president suggested that the grudge was several decades long.
‘Many years ago, a very successful real estate developer in New York known as Donald J. Trump, I bid on the renovation and rebuilding of this very United Nations complex,’ Trump said. ‘I said at the time that I would do it for $500 million.’
‘They decided to go another direction that produced a far inferior product,’ the president said.
Trump said he had warned the U.N. about cost overruns and those indeed happened.
‘As far as I’m concerned, frankly, looking at the building and getting stuck in the escalator, they still haven’t finished the job,’ Trump said.
‘Unfortunately, many things in the United Nations are happening just like that but on an even – much bigger scale,’ the president added.

First Lady Melania Trump sits in the audience to watch her husband’s speech Tuesday morning at the United Nations General Assembly

President Donald Trump (center left) and First Lady Melania Trump (center right) arrive to U.N. headquarters Tuesday morning in Manhattan followed by U.N. Amb. Mike Waltz, who was finally confirmed by the U.S. Senate last week
White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt said Monday that Trump would take the ‘globalists’ to task in his remarks before the U.N.
She said he would deliver a ‘major speech touting the renewal of American strength around the world.’
‘The president will also touch upon how globalist institutions have significantly decayed the world order and he will articulate his straightforward and constructive vision for the world,’ Leavitt said.
Trump’s MAGA movement has been anti-globalist in nature, with Trump and his ‘America First’ allies arguing that the global ‘elites’ have benefited from trade agreements, which have wiped out American manufacturing jobs.
The more conspiracy-minded members of the MAGA movement, such as adherents to QAnon, believe a global cabal created a sex trafficking ring of minors and that prominent Democratic politicians are involved.
The president and his MAGA allies have also condemned the U.N. for being too anti-Israel.
Ahead of the General Assembly, the State Department yanked a visa for Mahmoud Abbas, the president of the Palestinian Authority, and his delegation, on the grounds of national security.
Abbas will appear at the General Assembly in a pre-recorded message virtually.
On Monday, a top ally of the United States, France, was the latest Western nation to back Palestinian statehood, with French President Emmanuel Macron pushing that the two-state solution would pave the way to end the current conflict in Gaza.
Filling the U.S. ambassador’s job at the U.N. also hasn’t been a top priority for the administration.
Trump had originally appointed GOP Rep. Elise Stefanik to serve as his ambassador to the U.N. after the post was previously occupied by former South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley and former U.S. ambassador to Canada Kelly Craft during his first term.
Stefanik criticized ‘antisemitic rot’ growing in the U.N. during a Senate Foreign Relations Committee confirmation hearing.
In late March, with a slim majority in the House, Trump pulled Stefanik’s nomination, replacing her in May with his former national security adviser, Michael Waltz, who was ousted from the top National Security Council post after his role in Signalgate.
Waltz took the fall for adding the Atlantic’s editor-in-chief, Jeffrey Goldberg, to a Signal group of top advisers discussing attacks on Houthi rebels.
The Senate finally confirmed Waltz for the U.N. ambassadorship last week – just in time for this week’s General Assembly.
Trump hasn’t had the easiest time in front of the United Nations in past years.
In 2018, he was laughed at when his General Assembly address was braggadocios in nature.
The president proclaimed that ‘in less than two years, my administration has accomplished more than almost any administration in the history of our country.’
He then ad-libbed, ‘So true.’
That got the audience going.
‘Didn’t expect that reaction, but that’s OK,’ Trump answered the laughter.
At a press conference later in the day, the president insisted that the world leaders weren’t laughing with him.
‘They weren’t laughing at me, they were laughing with me. We had fun,’ he told reporters. ‘That was not laughing at me.’