President Donald Trump is showing America what a real leader's schedule looks like this weekend, juggling everything from rural healthcare initiatives to international diplomacy—all before capping it off at the College Football National Championship on Monday night.
The 47th President kicks off Friday morning with "The Great, Historic Investment in Rural Health Roundtable" in the East Room, addressing the healthcare needs of forgotten Americans in small towns across the heartland. This is the kind of event the legacy media won't cover, but it matters to millions of hardworking families who've been ignored by Washington elites for decades.
From there, it's wheels up to Palm Beach, Florida, where Trump will participate in the Southern Boulevard Dedication Ceremony Friday afternoon—a fitting tribute in his home state.
High-Stakes Diplomacy in Palm Beach
Saturday brings serious business when President Trump sits down with Slovak Prime Minister Robert Fico at Mar-a-Lago. The closed-press meeting signals significant diplomatic discussions are on the table. Slovakia, a NATO member navigating the complex European political landscape, has seen Fico take positions that align more closely with Trump's America First vision than with the globalist Brussels bureaucrats.
This is real diplomacy, folks—not the weakness and capitulation we saw from the Biden regime for four long years.
Championship Monday
After returning to Washington, President Trump heads to Miami Monday evening for the College Football National Championship Game. Unlike his predecessor, who could barely stay awake past 4 PM, Trump continues to engage with everyday Americans at the events they care about most.
Remember when Biden couldn't fill a parking lot? Meanwhile, expect a roaring reception when Trump takes his seat at Hard Rock Stadium.
This is what America voted for: a president who works hard, meets with world leaders, champions rural communities, AND still makes time to celebrate American traditions. The contrast with the Biden years couldn't be clearer.
