At a campaign event in New Hampshire last week, Donald Trump told an audience that Viktor Orbán is “the leader of Turkey.” He was, of course, mistaken: Orbán is the authoritarian prime minister of Hungary.
The slip-up came on the heels of remarks in which Trump said President Joe Biden might be responsible for starting “World War II.” Soon after, the former president confused Jeb Bush and George W. Bush. That was soon followed by an interview in which Trump also mixed up Biden and Barack Obama.
This week, the Republican also declared at a rally that Hungary borders Russia. It does not.
It’s difficult to speculate about the explanation for these missteps. Maybe the former president — who’s notoriously vain about wearing eyeglasses — misread his trusted teleprompter. Maybe he was fatigued. Maybe the errors were related to his age. Maybe he’s made roughly the same number of verbal mistakes each of us makes all the time — I briefly forgot Jim Jordan’s name at a staff meeting last week, to my great embarrassment — but Trump’s incidents stand out because he has a vastly larger platform and receives greater scrutiny.









