There’s nothing at all wrong with sitting presidents taking a break from the White House and going on vacation. Presidential respites, especially in August when Congress isn’t in session, have been common for generations, and there’s generally no point in criticizing a chief executive for enjoying a little R&R.
But as is often the case with the current president, Donald Trump’s circumstances are a little different. The Washington Post noted over the weekend:
President Trump, who knocked his predecessor’s work ethic and said he probably wouldn’t take vacations as president, has settled in for 17 days here at his secluded golf club in New Jersey’s fox-hunt and horse country. […]
“This is a not a vacation — meetings and calls!” he wrote [on Twitter on Saturday], as part of a string of tweets on varied topics, including a U.N. Security Council vote earlier in the day.
First, only Donald Trump would go on vacation and then declare to the world, “This is not a vacation.” There’s no real point in getting into a semantics debate, but when a 71-year-old man gets away from the office for more than two weeks, goes to a resort, watches TV, and plays golf, it certainly looks like a vacation.
Yes, by all appearances, Trump will still have some “meetings” and take “calls,” but that’s because no modern president can truly unplug for 17 days. The responsibilities of the office, even under Trump, are simply too great. That doesn’t mean, however, that he’s working his fingers to the bone.









