• President Donald Trump reenacted his descent down a ramp at West Point last weekend.
  • He told the crowd at his Tulsa rally that he struggled to walk down it because it was slippery and he was worn out.
  • He said he had been wearing leather-bottomed shoes, had been baking under the hot sun, and had saluted 600 cadets before walking down the ramp.
  • "I said, 'General, there is no way I can make it down that ramp without falling on my ass, general."
  • Trump also described his irritation that some had speculated he might be ill, telling the crowd, "I'll let you know if there's something wrong."
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President Donald Trump gave a lengthy explanation during his campaign rally in Tulsa, Oklahoma, on Saturday about his struggle to walk down a ramp the previous weekend, which was captured on video and prompted speculation about his health.

At one point on Saturday, Trump jokingly reenacted his descent down the ramp at West Point, where he had spoken to graduating students.

Trump told the Tulsa crowd he had struggled with the ramp in part because he was wearing leather-bottomed shoes and had been worn out from the heat and saluting roughly 600 cadets.

He also said the ramp was slippery, "like an ice skating rink," and had no handrails for him to grip.

"I said, 'There's no way.' You understand — I just saluted almost 600 times, I just made a big speech, I sat for other speeches, I'm being baked, I'm being baked like a cake," Trump said. "I said, 'General, there is no way I can make it down that ramp without falling on my ass, general.'"

He said he started his "journey" down the ramp "inch by inch," and demonstrated by stumbling across the Tulsa stage, while the audience responded with laughter and applause.

Trump also accused the media of cutting off the end of the clip, in which he claimed he "ran down" the remaining 10 feet of the ramp.

"I looked very handsome," Trump said. "I wouldn't want to run down the whole thing, because the fall there would be definitely bad. So I took these little steps, I ran down the last 10."

Video clips of the incident did not appear to show Trump running down the ramp, but he could be seen taking a few small, quick steps at the bottom.

Trump also appeared irritated at the speculation about his health, noting that the first lady had told him some viewers believed he had Parkinson's disease.

"They say, 'There's something wrong with our president.' I'll let you know if there's something wrong," Trump said.

He also discussed criticism over how he had struggled to lift a glass of water to his mouth. Trump then lifted a glass of water and drank from it in front of the Tulsa crowd, to cheers and applause.