US President Donald Trump said on Friday that he feels in great shape after his annual medical checkup, Agence France-Presse reported, quoted by BTA.
The American leader, who will turn 79 in June, spent several hours at the "Walter Reed" military hospital in Bethesda, Maryland, where the annual checkup was performed.
"Overall, I feel in great shape. My heart is good. "My spirit too," the American leader said aboard the presidential plane "Air Force One", on which he traveled to Florida after the examination.
Trump said that he performed well in both the cardiac examinations and the cognitive test.
The president specified that the results of the examination will be published tomorrow (Sunday).
Donald Trump does not consume alcohol and does not smoke, but does not hide his liking for sodas and food from fast food chains.
This is the first annual medical examination that Donald Trump has undergone, Reuters notes.
In January, Trump became the oldest person to take office as US president.
"I have never felt better and yet these things have to be done!", Trump wrote on the social platform "Truth Social" on Monday, in light of the review.
Trump said five more law firms have agreed to provide at least $600 million in free legal services on legal cases that are important to him, Reuters reported. The deals are the latest in a series of concessions offered by major law firms facing pressure from the White House.
The agreements between the US administration and the firms require the firms to avoid hiring practices based on diversity, which the White House considers illegal. The lawyers will also work pro bono on projects approved by the president.
"Kirkland & Ellis LLP", "Allen Overy Shearman Sterling US LLP", "Simpson Thatcher & Bartlett" Simpson Thacher & Bartlett LLP and Latham & Watkins LLP will provide pro bono legal services worth $125 million each.
"Cadwalader, Wickersham & Taft LLP" will provide the same services, but worth at least $100 million, Trump wrote in a post on his social network "Truth Social".
In a joint statement, the two firms said they looked forward to continuing their "constructive and productive relationship with President Trump and his team." The firms said that by entering into these agreements, they "adhere to long-standing principles important to each of them.".
Cadwalader, Wickersham & Taft LLP" Patrick Quinn said in a statement that the agreement with Trump was "consistent with the principles that have guided the firm for more than 230 years".
The agreements between the firms and the administration were reached after Trump issued executive orders against five law firms that he accused of using the legal system "as a weapon" against him and his allies. Trump attacked the firms, citing their ties to his political and legal opponents or their work on cases and issues that he opposes.
The executive orders effectively restrict lawyers' access to government buildings and administration employees. The firms were also threatened with the cancellation of contracts between the government and their clients.
Three of the firms affected by Trump's measures - "Perkins Coie, "WilmerHale" (WilmerHale) and "Jenner & Block" filed lawsuits challenging the US President's executive orders. They won preliminary hearings and thus temporarily blocked the executive orders. The lawyers managed to convince federal judges that these orders of Trump violate the right to expression and the right to a fair trial, enshrined in the US Constitution.