Donald Trump and his wife, Melania, at a fundraiser in Florida on April 6. AFP PIC
Donald Trump and his wife, Melania, at a fundraiser in Florida on April 6. AFP PIC

EXTREMELY discreet at the White House and even more reserved since leaving Washington, Melania Trump is keeping observers guessing whether she will appear, however warily, on the campaign trail alongside her husband.

Aloof and enigmatic, the Slovenian-born former model has been noticeably absent as husband Donald Trump makes his third bid for the White House.

Nor has she attended any court hearings with her husband as he navigates a myriad of cases.

His first criminal trial begins today, and her plans remain unclear.

Her absences are unusual in the United States, where the norm is that politicians' spouses show solidarity in times of crisis, and they have fuelled incessant rumours about the couple's relationship.

In early April, Melania accompanied her husband to a major fundraising event at which Republicans raised more than US$50 million for his presidential campaign.

And on April 20, she is to take part in a fundraiser for a group of LGBTQ conservatives, the so-called Log Cabin Republicans.

It is hard to tell whether she is starting to make minimal appearances to cut short speculation about the couple or out of a desire to help her spouse win back the White House in November.

For Katherine Jellison, a history professor at Ohio University and specialist in presidential couples, the fundraiser appearances illustrate a significant shift by Melania.

"These are only a few appearances, but they seem to be signs that she is easing her way back into public life, and into the Trump campaign," Jellison said.

Melania herself had hinted at such a comeback in a very brief exchange with journalists in mid-March.

"Stay tuned," she said with a smile, wearing large dark glasses.

Jellison said Melania might prefer events like the ones she's attending in April.

"She seems most comfortable doing these events rather than the more typical campaign activities for a political spouse: shaking hands and making small talk with a crowd of voters."

That style, she says, is more suited to Jill Biden, whose husband, President Joe Biden, is Trump's Democratic rival in the November election.

Jill regularly crisscrosses the country, unafraid to venture into hotly disputed states. And in early March, she launched an initiative to mobilise women voters.

Melania, on the other hand, has not had an easy time with her previous major public appearances.

Her speech at the 2016 Republican nominating convention was ridiculed, and not without merit: entire passages were lifted from a speech by former first lady Michelle Obama.

She also faced criticism on trips undertaken as first lady, notably when she visited newly arrived migrant children in a shelter near the border with Mexico.

She wore a jacket with the message — "I really don't care. Do U?" — written on the back.

She since has been sparing and cautious in her public appearances. She did emerge from her silence in a rare interview in 2018.

When asked about her husband's presumed infidelity with porn star Stormy Daniels, she told the questioner that she had "much more important things to think about". It was the hush money payments Trump authorised to the adult-film actress, shortly before the 2016 election, that led to his first criminal trial.

Jury selection starts today in New York. With Melania or not, the ex-president is expected to be in attendance.


The writer is from Agence France-Presse