What's a puppet to do? How 'bout "executive time?"

Started by yankeedoodle, February 04, 2019, 02:15:24 PM

Previous topic - Next topic

yankeedoodle

Here at TiU, we've know from the very beginning that shit-for-brains shabbos goy Donnie-boy is merely a puppet of Israhell, in the control of Israhell's agent, President/King Kushner, who runs Donnie-boy and America from instructions from Israhell.

So, what is a big fat degenerate loudmouth piece-of-shit supposed to do all day long, while Israhell is running the country?  It's called "executive time."

Trump reportedly reserves most of his schedule for 'executive time'
https://www.marketwatch.com/story/trump-reportedly-reserves-most-of-his-schedule-for-executive-time-2019-02-04?mod=MW_section_top_stories

Two words describe how President Donald Trump spent about 60% of his officially scheduled time in the three months since the midterms:  'Executive time.'

That's according to a report from Axios  https://www.axios.com/donald-trump-private-schedules-leak-executive-time-34e67fbb-3af6-48df-aefb-52e02c334255.html  on Sunday that cites Trump's private schedule, which was leaked by a White House source.

So what is "executive time" exactly?

It's time the president reportedly spends watching TV, reading the papers and bouncing what he sees and reads off friends, aides, members of Congress, officials, et al. It's also a time for firing off his epic tweetstorms.

Executive time supposedly was introduced by former White House chief of staff John Kelly because Trump didn't want to be locked into a regular schedule.

Here's an Axios graphic on what January's schedule looked like. Orange is executive time, while the rest is designated as travel, meetings and other events:



Chris Whipple, author and student of presidential schedules, says how Trump spends his days is another example of his unique presidency. "The most important asset in any presidency is the president's time," he told Axios. "And Trump is a guy who gives new meaning to the notion of an unstructured presidency."

Trump's personal secretary, Madeleine Westerhout, wasn't pleased that the schedules got out, according to a Twitter post in which she claimed Trump engages in hundreds of calls and meetings daily:

One respondent noted that even Westerhout's assertion, which he was not willing to take at face value, could leave the Trump White House in breach of the Presidential Records Act.

White House press secretary Sarah Sanders explained what the designation is all about in an emailed statement to Axios: "While he spends much of his average day in scheduled meetings, events, and calls, there is time to allow for a more creative environment that has helped make him the most productive President in modern history," she wrote.