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Home Local News Trump’s 2025 Cabinet Meeting: Doodling, Drowsiness, and a Noteworthy Misspelling Capture Attention

Trump’s 2025 Cabinet Meeting: Doodling, Drowsiness, and a Noteworthy Misspelling Capture Attention

Doodling, drowsiness and a conspicuous misspelling highlight Trump's last Cabinet meeting of 2025
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Published on 02 December 2025
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WASHINGTON – As the White House Cabinet meeting stretched well beyond two hours on Tuesday, President Donald Trump appeared to nod off, while his budget director amused himself with sketches of fluffy clouds. Meanwhile, Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth managed to present his report early, although his nameplate bore a typographical error.

Despite the lethargic and somewhat disorganized atmosphere, the meeting concluded with significant announcements. President Trump expressed his desire to limit Somali immigration to the U.S., and Hegseth defended a recent military action in the Caribbean, attributing it to the “fog of war” after a subsequent strike on a suspected drug-trafficking vessel in September.

The President opened the session by pointing out that it would be the last Cabinet meeting until 2026. While marathon advisory sessions have become a hallmark of Trump’s presidency, characterized by his top aides offering effusive praise, this particular gathering seemed to underscore the need for a holiday respite.

Trump’s introductory remarks were extensive, primarily revisiting familiar policy announcements from earlier months. He also revisited previous grievances, such as his unfounded claims of victory in the 2020 presidential election.

“Go quickly,” he urged.

The president then gave each Cabinet member a chance to speak, declaring, “We’re gonna go quickly.” That did little to stop most Cabinet members from offering long presentations.

Hegseth went first and praised the Trump administration’s move to rename his agency the Department of War — something that can’t be officially done without an act of Congress. But the nameplate in front of Hegseth labeled him the “ssecretary of war,” including a mistaken double “S” that quickly became the source of searing online ridicule.

After that, as each official took turns speaking, a TV camera trained on Trump showed him struggling to stay alert. The president sat back in his chair with his eyes occasionally drooping and sometimes shutting completely.

Trump’s apparent sleepiness followed his criticism of a recent New York Times story examining his schedule and stamina at age 79. Trump again slammed the Times story early in Tuesday’s meeting and even slipped into the third person to assure all involved that “Trump is sharp.”

Another indication that things were dragging came from budget director Russell Vought, who was spotted sketching a bucolic scene on White House letterhead.

Vought drew mountains framed by pine trees topped by the kind of friendly-seeming clouds that public television legend Bob Ross preferred to crowd his serene landscape paintings with. The budget chief also sketched an arrow underneath his mountain. Where it was supposed to be pointing was not clear.

Clashing affordability messaging

Just as Trump’s admonishments to keep things tight were flouted, some of the Cabinet members also defied the president in their presentations when it came to the issue of affordability.

Trump made a point in his opening remarks to call concerns that Democrats have raised about rising costs a “con job.” That didn’t stop many of his administration’s top voices from earnestly detailing how they were indeed seeking to reduce prices nationwide.

Agriculture Secretary Brooke Rollins talked about economic pressures on farmers, Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent called affordability a “crisis,” and Housing and Urban Development Secretary Scott Turner said that hundreds of thousands of Americans becoming first-time homebuyers was an example of how the administration was making strides to achieve greater affordability.

The final speaker was Secretary of State Marco Rubio, who spoke for several minutes and acknowledged: “I know I’m last, so I wanted to be fast. But there’s a lot to cover.”

All told, Tuesday’s gathering lasted more than two hours. That fell short of Trump’s Cabinet meeting record: an August marathon that stretched to a whopping three hours and 17 minutes.

Still, even the president acknowledged that the latest meeting was going long. “We’re spending a lot of time in here,” he said.

Trump wrapped things by taking questions from reporters, but only after jokingly asking, “After that, do you WANT to ask any questions?” He also pointed at a journalist holding a boom mic to capture sound from the Cabinet meeting and playfully offered, “How strong are you?”

“You’ve been holding that for two hours,” the president continued, drawing laughs from Cabinet members. “There are very few people who could do that. I’m very proud of you.”

A newsy Q&A

Reporters’ questions shook off the doldrums.

Hegseth said he did not see that there were survivors in the water when the second strike on the boat off Venezuela was ordered and launched in early September. He said “the thing was on fire” and cited the “fog of war” in defending what occurred. He also said he “didn’t stick around” for the remainder of the Sept. 2 mission following the initial strike.

In response to a later question, Trump declared he didn’t want Somali immigrants in the U.S., adding that residents of the war-ravaged eastern African country should stay there and try to fix their homeland. He also accused Somalis of being too reliant on U.S. aid programs while offering little to the nation in return.

That drew applause from his Cabinet, though the questions ended abruptly with journalists soon hustled out of the room. Trump punctuated the conclusion by slapping his hand twice on the table, pushing his chair back, standing up and thumping Hegseth on the shoulder.

Copyright 2025 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed without permission.

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