President Donald Trump’s private life inside the White House is back under scrutiny after explosive claims from his biographer, Michael Wolff, paint a picture of chaos, paranoia, and late-night theatrics.
Appearing on the Inside Trump’s Head podcast, Wolff revealed that during Trump’s first term, the then-president repeatedly clashed with both Secret Service agents and White House domestic staff over his bedroom habits — incidents that Wolff says underscore Trump’s obsession with control and his refusal to follow established norms.
According to Wolff, one of the biggest flashpoints involved Trump’s decision to install a lock on his bedroom door against the direct objections of the Secret Service.
“This was a confrontation,” Wolff recalled. “The Secret Service was furious. They argued it was a security risk. Eventually, they demanded the lock be removed.”
White House security protocols dictate that agents must have immediate access to the president’s bedroom in case of emergencies. Trump, however, reportedly resisted any intrusion into what he called his “sanctuary.”
“It became a battle of wills,” Wolff said. “Trump wanted total control of his private space — even if it meant compromising his safety.”
Wolff also recounted a bizarre incident involving Trump’s bedding, which he described as “one of the strangest meltdowns” of his presidency.
“When the domestic staff changed his sheets, he had a fit,” Wolff said. “He lost it completely. I have no idea what that was about, but it says a lot about how he views his personal space.”
Former White House insiders have long whispered about Trump’s fixation on cleanliness and germ avoidance — habits that reportedly extend to his sleeping arrangements. “He doesn’t like anyone touching his stuff,” one ex-staffer, speaking anonymously, told Politico last year. “Everything in his room has to be exactly how he left it.”
Wolff claims Trump’s approach to the presidency also extended to how he ran the Oval Office, which he described as “chaotic” compared to previous administrations.
“It’s like a bus station,” Wolff said. “You’d walk in and there would be 20, 30 people — sometimes more. They’d bring in chairs, hang around, and Trump would just talk, nonstop.”
According to Wolff, Trump’s meetings often devolved into long, meandering monologues peppered with grievances, jokes, and conspiracy theories.
“There is no filter,” Wolff explained. “Whatever is in his head comes out of his mouth. It’s chaos, confusion, and constant churn.”
Podcast host Joanna Coles pressed Wolff on Trump’s private life, asking, “How does Trump even go to bed at night? He doesn’t seem to have close friends. Everyone around him hates him or each other. Does he just… talk himself to sleep?”
Wolff responded bluntly: “Yes. He’s on the phone until the very last moment. He talks, and talks, and talks — to aides, to random friends, sometimes to people who barely know him.”
The biographer added that in his decades of covering presidents, he’s never seen anyone quite like Trump. “He doesn’t listen. Ever. He fills every silence. There’s no pause, no breath. It’s exhausting.”
Trump’s current communications director, Steven Cheung, wasted no time firing back at Wolff’s claims, unleashing a characteristically aggressive response.
“Michael Wolff lives in an alternate universe,” Cheung said in a statement. “He fabricates lies to stay relevant. He’s a sad, pathetic parasite.”
Cheung has repeatedly accused Wolff of inventing stories, previously calling him “a sack of s—t” and suggesting the author suffers from “Trump Derangement Syndrome.”
The revelations come just days after Trump’s controversial meeting with Russian President Vladimir Putin, which he has tried to spin as a diplomatic win despite widespread criticism. For many, Wolff’s claims reinforce concerns that Trump’s leadership style — impulsive, secretive, and chaotic — hasn’t changed in his second term.
“Trump’s inability to follow basic security protocols, even in something as simple as a bedroom lock, raises serious questions,” said Dr. Elaine Marcus, a political historian at Georgetown University. “Presidents are supposed to adapt to the institution. Trump continues to bend it around himself — and that’s destabilizing.”
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Usual BS from Wolff… why bother to report it? We don’t read it…
Who cares if he likes his personal space a certain way? It’s his space! Who cares if he wants to lock his door? He’s the Presudebt and it’s his space! As to a safety issue is the author trying to tell us that the secret service agent can’t or won’t for e the locked door open in an emergency? Of course they will!!
Another non/story from Trump Derangement News, no I mean nextgennews!!!
Woolf is a liar, period! He prays on everyone.
Does he live in the bedrooms of the President and his wife??
It’s HIS bedroom…the only place that he has any sense of privacy…I keep mine the exact way every time, and no one complains about it! (57 yrs here)
Wolff is a habitual liar, just like Hunter and his old man!
If President Trump wants a lock on his bedroom door, then put one on it! Don’t tell me that the Secret Service can’t open a lock… As long as someone is patrolling the grounds and inside the White House, let him have his locked door.
He needs his door locked one ofthe staff would probably kill him
This guy is a real liar! Nothing he says has a bit of truth to it. He needs to be sued.