New red flags raised about Trump's 'cognitive health': 'He's only going to get worse'
U.S. President Donald Trump and U.S. Vice President JD Vance meet with Ukraine's President Volodymyr Zelenskiy (not pictured) over lunch in the Cabinet Room at the White House in Washington, D.C., U.S., October 17, 2025. REUTERS/Jonathan Ernst

Prominent activists on Sunday raised a renewed alarm about Donald Trump's "cognitive health," with one conservative declaring, "He's still only going to get worse."

Amid frantic White House moves both on and off American soil, Charlotte Clymer, an Army Veteran and a writer who has done work for the Human Rights Campaign, wrote on social media, "I'm not a doctor or a nurse. I have no medical expertise. Far be it from me to diagnose anyone. Not my place. I don't know what's going on with Trump. But I do know something is going on with him. We all can see something is pretty damn off with him."

Clymer then put the "legacy media" on notice for failing to raise these same questions, asking, "Where is the scrutiny over his cognitive health that legacy media had for Pres. Biden? How much worse will this get until legacy media does what they're supposed to do here?"

Prominent conservative attorney George Conway, who has opposed Trump for years, further responded to Clymer, writing, "I had a few thoughts on this question in 2019 and wrote this 11,000+ word piece in [The Atlantic] about [Trump's] serious psychiatric disorders (Narcissistic Personality Disorder and Antisocial Personality Disorder, for starters) to explain why, as a legal and constitutional matter, he was unfit for the presidency and would only become more so with the passage of time."

Conway went on to talk about his view on Trump's mental health status as of this year.

"In the six-plus years since, every mental health professional I have come across has told me that my essay had it exactly right," he then added. "I think every word of it has been proven right many times over. Even today, he's still only going to get worse."