Washington – The president’s residence is the animal house now.
White House journalists dodged birds and rodents on Friday at the end of a tumultuous week defined by the “reciprocal” commercial war of President Trump.
Fox News correspondent, Peter Doucy, began his day by shaking his hands, but not to get a presidential question, when he was a tree for a large dove.
Doucy, 37, was live in “Fox & Friends” around 7 in the morning when the bird tried to chase in his well combined blond hair.

“A bird has just landed in my head!” Doucy shouted as he bent down to avoid a second landing.
The creature continued its cameo inside the Fox News Channel store in the White House, the northern grass, with Dooy’s face, when the hosts based in New York City pointed out that his “good hair” was raised on the back.
“That’s probably so dirty!” He closed in response.
In the afternoon, about 100 yards away, journalists twisted after the press secretary Karoline Leavitt announced to the press gathered that a mouse had just seen.

“There was a mouse in the information room today, so I hope someone registered [it] So you don’t run here and it distracts me! “Leavitt said.
“That would be a good way for all of you to distract me, real.”
A journalist expressed relief when Leavitt’s information session ended after only 21 minutes before planning a hurried exit from the executive mansion.
The incidents provided a fun distraction of the hard news of the week, including Trump’s decision to promulgate massive tariffs in most world assets. He ordered a 90 -day China day that excluded the pause to allow conversations, but in effect left a new baseline of 10% for most products.
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The White House has experienced wildlife intrusions for years.
The flies, cockroaches and mold have been recurring problems, while last month the hall right next to the famous west wing colonnade issued a posted stench due to a corpse of animals solved in the process of becoming a permanent addition to the historical structure.
In one of the best remembered rodent meetings, one of Washington’s great resident rats was filled through the Rosas Garden, while President Trump celebrated an event in 2020.
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