President Trump said he was considering doing a 180-degree turn on his decision to withdraw the United States from the World Health Organization days after signing an executive order to do so.
The president said at a rally at the Circa Resort & Casino in Las Vegas on Saturday that he would “consider doing it again,” but was far from committing.
“I don’t know, they have to clean it up a little,” he added.
Trump floated the idea when he said he withdrew from the WHO because he believes the organization was defrauding the United States and described the federal government’s overpayments over the years as “onerous.”
He compared the $500 million the United States contributes to the WHO each year with the $39 million China pays, even though China’s population of 1.4 billion is more than four times larger than that of the United States.
Trump said his withdrawal from the WHO, one of his first executive orders signed just hours after his inauguration on Monday, was due to “failing to adopt urgently needed reforms.”
The move came four years after Trump previously attempted to withdraw from the WHO during the Covid-19 pandemic, a move that was ultimately blocked by Joe Biden after the 2020 election.
Withdrawing from the WHO was one of a series of executive orders signed by Trump in his first week, in addition to furloughing all DEI employees in the federal government, rescinding 78 Biden-era executive orders and releasing classified documents related to the JFK assassinations. and MLK Jr.
President Trump said at a rally in Las Vegas on Saturday that he was considering doing a 180-degree turn on his decision to withdraw the United States from the World Health Organization days after signing an executive order to do so.

Trump made his departure from the WHO one of the first steps in his return to the White House
Trump received a hero’s welcome on Saturday during his rally in Las Vegas, which was notably attended by Stewart Rhodes, founder of the anti-government “militia” Oath Keepers, whom Trump pardoned this week.
In his remarks to the crowd, Trump said he intended to make good on another of his campaign promises: ending taxes on workers’ tips.
‘Your tips will be 100% yours, isn’t that great?’ he said to applause.
After a week of reversing many of his predecessor’s actions in the White House, Trump revealed another when he said he sought to stop Biden’s hiring of more than 80,000 new IRS agents.
“They hired, or attempted to hire, 88,000 workers to go after them and we are in the process of developing a plan to fire them all,” he said.
Trump added: “Or maybe we’ll move them to the border.”
In the flurry of executive orders he signed this week, Trump took the opportunity to criticize Biden and praise his efforts to quickly reshape the federal government.
“This week alone I took nearly 350 executive actions to reverse the horrible failures and betrayals that were inherited from a group of people who didn’t know what the hell they were doing,” he said.
“Our message could not be clearer: America’s decline is over.”

Trump received a hero’s welcome on Saturday during his rally in Las Vegas, which was notably attended by Stewart Rhodes, founder of the anti-government “militia” Oath Keepers, whom Trump pardoned this week.

There was more good news for Trump when he arrived in Las Vegas on Friday night when Pete Hegseth, his controversial pick for defense secretary, was confirmed in the Senate.
The rally in Las Vegas came as part of Trump’s trip at the end of his first week back in power to the West Coast to assess the damage caused by the devastating Los Angeles wildfires.
On his way back east, the new president told his crowd of MAGA fans in Sin City that he decided to stop by to thank them for helping him win Nevada in the November election, where he became the first Republican to win the state. since 2004.
“I just came here because I wanted to thank the people of Nevada for giving us such a big victory,” he said.
‘This state’s only Republican victory in decades… and it was a landslide. “We had a big win and an early win… it was a bad sign for the Democrats.”
There was more good news for Trump when he arrived in Las Vegas on Friday night. Pete Hegseth, his controversial pick for defense secretary, was confirmed to the position after Vice President JD Vance cast the deciding vote in the Senate.
“He will be a very good secretary of defense,” Trump said earlier.
He will spend the rest of the weekend at his Doral Club in Miami.