President Trump Wants to Be Everywhere, All the Time
To understand how Mr. Trump has achieved this omnipresence, The New York Times reviewed the first 329 days of his second term, finding at least one instance each day when he attracted the public’s attention to himself and his actions.
The review encompassed more than 250 media appearances, more than 320 official appearances, and more than 5,000 Truth Social posts or reposts. The analysis shows that while Mr. Trump has lagged his predecessors in his number of official appearances, he has pursued a raft of innovative methods to force himself into the public consciousness on a daily, and sometimes even hourly, basis.
The battery of activity started from the moment he was inaugurated, when he traveled from the Capitol Building to the Capital One Arena to publicly sign a flurry of executive orders.
Since then, he has stayed in the public eye in part by doing things no president has ever done. High-stakes Oval Office meetings, like his negotiations with President Volodymyr Zelensky of Ukraine, are held on-camera and broadcast live on global news networks. His Q.-and-A. sessions with reporters frequently last an hour or more.
He regularly airs his opinions – on social media, in discursive asides at rallies – about idiosyncratic subjects that range widely across the zeitgeist, from Sydney Sweeney’s sexy denim ads to the redesigned logo of the Cracker Barrel restaurant chain to the mysterious fate of the aviator Amelia Earhart, who vanished over the Pacific Ocean in 1937.
And his engagement with the news media has soared well beyond the start of his first administration.
Through Dec. 14, Mr. Trump took reporters’ questions on 449 occasions, compared with 223 during the same period of his first term. On average, Mr. Trump has interacted with journalists roughly twice a day, doubling his rate from 2017, according to Martha Joynt Kumar, a Towson University political scientist who tracks presidential press interactions. Mr. Trump limits which news outlets can ask questions at small events, but in sheer volume, he is the most media-accessible modern president, and far outpaces his predecessor, Joseph R. Biden Jr.
“Reporters will be in my office asking me for the president’s reaction to a breaking news story,” Karoline Leavitt, the White House press secretary, said in an interview. “And I’ll just say to them, ‘I don’t know, why don’t you ask him yourself in 30 minutes?’”
Finding the Cameras
President Trump’s media appearances have soared this year, more than doubling both the Biden administration’s and those of his own first term.
Many of his public moments go viral online, like his diatribe about restoring the name of the Washington Redskins, or the A.I.-generated video meme he posted of himself dribbling a soccer ball with Cristiano Ronaldo in the Oval Office. They take on a life of their own, rippling across social media and dissected and amplified by influencers and mass media platforms alike.
The result is a president whose not-so-inner monologue is injected into our daily lives in myriad ways, when we are watching TV on the weekends or idly scrolling the web – a Greek chorus for our national narrative.
“He’s the most ubiquitous president ever,” said Douglas Brinkley, the presidential historian.
The media strategy aligns with his political strategy.
Dating back to his years as an outspoken real estate developer and reality TV star, Mr. Trump has relished being unavoidable for comment. But at age 79, he has been outdoing his younger self. And there is a logic to his logorrhea.
Mr. Trump’s allies often speak of the political benefits of flooding the zone: pursuing so many policies, ideas, and dramatic restructurings of the normal ways of governance as to overwhelm the system. “All pedal, no brake,” as Stephen K. Bannon, Mr. Trump’s one-time adviser, has called it.
“We joke internally that he is our ultimate director of communications,” Ms. Leavitt said.
He possesses remarkable media instincts and serves as the ultimate decision-maker on all policies. Since taking office on January 20th, he has maintained a ‘flood the zone’ and ‘do as much as possible’ mindset. workers

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Attacks media for reporting on his health
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Has interview with One America News

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Says Democrats “treated me fairly” in Congress

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Denies sending former president to Russia

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Attends rally in support of GOP candidate

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Claims he never intended to fire Fauci

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Attacks Biden’s mental acuity

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Attacks media for reporting on his health

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Attacks Biden’s mental acuity

13
Claims he never intended to fire Fauci

14
Settles with law firm Willkie Farr & Gallagher

15
Fires N.S.C. workers

16
Claims he never intended to fire Fauci

17
Attacks Biden’s mental acuity

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Claims he never intended to fire Fauci
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Attacks media for reporting on his health

21
Settles with law firm Willkie Farr & Gallagher

22
Fires N.S.C. workers

23
Claims he never intended to fire Fauci

24
Attacks Biden’s mental acuity

25
Claims he never intended to fire Fauci

26
Attacks Biden’s mental acuity

27
Claims he never intended to fire Fauci

28
Settles with law firm Willkie Farr & Gallagher

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Fires N.S.C. workers

9
Appoints ambassador to Bahamas

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Hosts Ford’s Theater gala

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Confirms inauguration of U.S. embassy in Jerusalem

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Signs executive order on infrastructure projects

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Hosts American Legion at White House

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Meets with Honduran president

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Signs executive order on wildlife trafficking

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Hosts meeting on border security

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Signs executive order on mental health care
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Hosts meeting on school safety
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Welcomes Italy’s prime minister to White House

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Signs executive order on opioid crisis

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Meets with South Korean president

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Signs executive order on health care plans
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Has interview with Fox News

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Signs executive order on welfare reform
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Meets with German chancellor at White House

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Signs executive order on education
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Has interview with CNN

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Signs executive order on cybersecurity

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Signs executive order on national security

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Signs executive order on immigration
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Hosts meeting with business leaders






















