Where are all the teafreaks screaming about Obama playing golf? BTW, where's FLOTUS???
Leaked schedules show Trump has spent more than half of last 3 months in 'Executive Time':
President Trump has spent about 60 percent of his time over the past three months in "Executive Time," according to leaked schedules obtained by Axios.
A source told Axios that Trump typically spends the first five hours of his day in his residency. There he is understood to be watching television, reading newspapers and making phone calls to aides, lawmakers, friends, advisers and administration officials.
Trump's first meeting of the day typically doesn't come until 11 or 11:30 a.m. and is typically an intelligence briefing or a half-hour meeting with his chief of staff.
Axios reported that "Executive Time" is particularly dominant on some days. The report notes that on Jan. 18, he had one hour of scheduled meetings and seven hours of "Executive Time."
White House press secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders told Axios that Trump "has a different leadership style than his predecessors and the results speak for themselves."
A White House source has leaked nearly every day of President Trump's private schedule for the past three months.
Why it matters: This unusually voluminous leak gives us unprecedented visibility into how this president spends his days. The schedules, which cover nearly every working day since the midterms, show that Trump has spent around 60% of his scheduled time over the past 3 months in unstructured "Executive Time."
We've published every page of the leaked schedules in a piece that accompanies this item. To protect our source, we retyped the schedules in the same format that West Wing staff receives them.
What the schedules show: Trump, an early riser, usually spends the first 5 hours of the day in Executive Time. Each day's schedule places Trump in "Location: Oval Office" from 8 to 11 a.m.
But Trump, who often wakes before 6 a.m., is never in the Oval during those hours, according to six sources with direct knowledge.
Instead, he spends his mornings in the residence, watching TV, reading the papers, and responding to what he sees and reads by phoning aides, members of Congress, friends, administration officials and informal advisers.