
The cognitive test Donald Trump described as "hard" has been taken by his niece, Mary Trump.
The president claimed the Montreal Cognitive Assessment he took earlier this year was "very hard" and urged Democrats Jasmine Crockett and Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez to take it.
Donald Trump told reporters: "AOC, look. I think she's very nice, but she's very low-IQ. We really don't need low-IQ. Between her and Crockett, we give them both an IQ test to see who comes out best. Now I took my test, I took a real test at Walter Reed Medical Center, and I aced it. I got every one of them, all those questions right. Now it's time for them to take a test."
Mary Trump highlighted the cognitive test Trump took in 2017, sharing a clip of the president claiming he is "cognitively there" after taking on the assessment. He said at the time, "Like you'll go person, woman, man, camera, TV, 10 minutes, 15, 20 minutes later, they say, 'Remember the first question? Not the first, but the 10th question. Give us that again. Can you do that again?' I do it because I have like a good memory. Because I'm cognitively there."
Another cognitive test was issued for Donald Trump earlier this year, with the sitting president also receiving an MRI at Walter Reed National Military Medical Center.
Mary Trump, who is a psychologist, has since suggested the president is "not a well man", saying: "I am not a neurologist or a neuropsychologist, but I've been told that a doctor only orders that protocol if they're concerned that the patient may have suffered some kind of stroke or something.
"I don't know if this is true, but once again, we have Donald bragging about the results not just of the MRI, which indeed he aced, but also the cognitive assessment."
She added: "In all seriousness, Donald Trump is not a well man. We need to continue to focus on the ways in which he is deteriorating cognitively, psychologically, emotionally, and intellectually."
Later in the video, Mary Trump takes the same test the president took. She appears to have passed with flying colors, reciting five words which are recalled later in the test and repeating sentences back to a person off-screen.



