Biden appears to fall asleep dur­ing African sum­mit

Biden appears to fall asleep during African summit

Pres­i­dent Joe Biden is on a trip to Ango­la this week, and it appeared that dur­ing one of his events in the African coun­try, his trav­el across the Atlantic Ocean left him with some jet lag.

Dur­ing a meet­ing with African lead­ers at the Lobito Cor­ri­dor Trans-Africa Sum­mit on Wednes­day, Biden appeared to mon­e­tar­i­ly fall asleep. The pres­i­dent closed his eyes mul­ti­ple times as oth­er lead­ers and offi­cials spoke, and at times, his head appeared to drift into sleep as his eyes remained closed.

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Biden’s appar­ent sleep episodes were brief, and come near the end of a whirl­wind trip to Ango­la which saw him vis­it with Angolan Pres­i­dent Joao Louren­co and vis­it the country’s Nation­al Muse­um of Slav­ery. The pres­i­dent arrived in Ango­la Mon­day and is leav­ing the coun­try, which is six hours ahead of Wash­ing­ton, D.C., Wednes­day. Biden is expect­ed to arrive back at the White House Thurs­day.

The Wash­ing­ton Exam­in­er has reached out to the White House for com­ment.

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Dur­ing the sum­mit, Biden announced the U.S. would invest anoth­er $600 mil­lion into the rail cor­ri­dor which goes across the African con­ti­nent, includ­ing upgrad­ing the rail­road and help­ing with devel­op­ment of the cor­ri­dor.

 “The Unit­ed States under­stands that how we invest in Africa is just as impor­tant as how much we invest in Africa,” Biden said at the sum­mit.

“The Lead­ers dis­cussed the trans­for­ma­tive impact the Lobito Trans-Africa Cor­ri­dor has had on enhanc­ing access to the crit­i­cal min­er­als need­ed for the clean ener­gy tran­si­tion and dig­i­tal con­nec­tiv­i­ty, strength­en­ing food secu­ri­ty, boost­ing region­al trade, and empow­er­ing com­mu­ni­ties all along the Cor­ri­dor,” a White House read­out of the meet­ing said.

Biden’s trip to Africa comes more than a month before he leaves the White House on Jan. 20, and will be one of his final inter­na­tion­al trips before his term expires.

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The president’s sleep was a top­ic of dis­cus­sion fol­low­ing his poor debate per­for­mance against now-Pres­i­dent-elect Don­ald Trump in June.

A report from the New York Times in July claimed that the pres­i­dent told Demo­c­ra­t­ic gov­er­nors he need­ed more sleep and few­er events after 8 p.m., and would be fine to con­tin­ue his reelec­tion bid. Lat­er that month, Biden dropped his bid for a sec­ond term.