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‘Not a test of IQ’: Doctor who designed cognitive test addresses Trump’s boasts

Donald Trump has called on all presidential candidates to take a cognitive test, as he faces questions on his own capacity to do the job.

Speaking today, Trump said he was the only president to take such a test, having done it three times.

"I've aced each one," Trump said.

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Donald Trump has bragged of aceing cognitive tests.

"Whenever they get a little sassy, saying 'Does he still have it? Does it still have what it takes,' I say 'I'll take another one'."

Trump pointed out the tests were "hard".

"The first question is very easy," he said.

"You have a lion, a bear, an alligator, and a, what's another good..? A squirrel."

"Which is the squirrel?"

"By the time you get to the middle they're very tough."

He bragged about his results.

"One doctor said, 'It's the first time I've ever seen anyone get all questions right,'" Trump said.

"That's a doctor, who does this stuff for a living."

The test the president is referring to is the Montreal Cognitive Test.

The ten-minute test developed by Canadian neurologist Ziad Nasreddine is intended to determine if a person has conditions like Alzheimer's or dementia.

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Ziad Nasreddine developed this cognitive test to determine if patients have dementia, etc.

Sample questions include drawing an analogue clock with the correct time, with points given for correct numbering.

Another question is to name as many words as they can in a minute beginning with the letter B.

A failing grade would be less than 11 words.

The final questions are to know the date, day of the week, their location and what city they are in.

"It wasn't designed to be a test of IQ," Nasreddine told nine.com.au.

"It was designed to assess normal cognitive performance."

The test is used in about 200 countries, including Australia.

The average person scores 26 out of 30 on the test. Nasreddine said about ten per cent of people who are Trump's age get all the answers right.

"I think he's proud that he is able to demonstrate that his cognition is fine.

"Obviously, he likes to maybe boast about it because of his age, and people might think that at his age, you might have more difficulty with your cognition."

Nasreddine was quick to point out that while many people attempt to take the Montreal Cognitive Test by themselves, that was not how it was designed.

Another test developed by Nasreddine is designed to be done by individuals.

A poll for the Washington Post this week found 59 per cent of Americans do not believe Trump has the mental sharpness to do his job.

Only 40 per cent believed he did.

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Most Americans believe Donald Trump does not have the mental sharpness needed to do the job.

The same poll showed 55 per cent of people believed he was not in good enough physical health to do the job.

No other president has taken a cognitive test while in office.

Joe Biden was also dogged by questions about his cognitive ability, but did not take a test.

The New York Times reported that while his staff were confident Biden would pass the test, the mere act of taking it would reflect poorly on his mental state.

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Stunning footage shows croc containing human remains airlifted from river

A South African policeman has bravely helped winch a massive crocodile from a river, with later testing showing the croc contained human remains.

Video footage, shared on social media by South African police, showed Captain Johan Potgieter being winched on a helicopter over the "crocodile-infested" Komati River before helping attach a large crocodile to the rope.

The river is located in the east of the country, near the border with Mozambique.

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The policeman winched the massive crocodile away from the river.

The statement said the crocodile, which was already euthanised, was taken away, and a study of the crocodile's body found the remains of a missing person.

According to local media reports, the crocodile was around 4.5 metres long and weighed 500 kilograms.

The same reports said the remains are believed to be of a missing 59-year-old businessman, who went missing last week.

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Potgieter's actions and bravery were met with praise.

"Lieutenant General Puleng Dimpane commends the extraordinary bravery and selflessness displayed," the statement on social media read.

"He courageously secured a crocodile using a rope under extremely dangerous conditions."

Police said they would now carry out a DNA analysis of the remains to confirm the identity of the deceased.

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AFL icon accused of smashing woman’s head against door in ‘petrifying’ assault

A woman has alleged AFL great Nicky Winmar dragged her by the hair and smashed her head against a door during a "petrifying" attack.

The woman, who cannot be identified, made the accusations at Bendigo Magistrates Court today as Winmar fought four assault charges in a contested hearing.

Police allege the former St Kilda star, 60, attacked the woman at Cohuna in northern Victoria on May 14, 2025.

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Nicky Winmar arrives to the Melbourne Magistrates Court in Melbourne, Victoria, Friday, November 21, 2025.

She told the court Winmar unexpectedly became angry that evening and started yelling at her.

"Just complete ranting and screaming at me – none of it made sense," she told the court.

"We hadn't been arguing or anything like that. I couldn't work out what was going on. I was in absolute shock."

The woman alleged Winmar grabbed her arm and twisted it hard before pulling her by the ponytail and dragging her into another room.

She said Winmar then pushed her against a wall, before yelling and spitting in her face.

"He turned off the light and wouldn't let me out," the woman told the court.

"He physically overpowered me so I couldn't get out. He knew I was scared."

The woman told the court he eventually let go of her and she ran to grab her mobile phone but he took it off her.

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Nicky Winmar at the 1997 AFL Grand Final.

He only passed the phone back after she said she wanted to call a friend instead of the police, the court was told.

The woman said she spoke to her friend before passing the phone back to Winmar and running from the room.

He allegedly chased after her and grabbed her head before bashing it repeatedly into a wooden door.

"I was getting dizzy, it was incredibly painful," she told the court.

The woman said she managed to break free and lock herself into a room, where she called Triple Zero.

"I was petrified he was going to do more things to me," the woman said in her evidence.

"I was actually fearful for my life."

The Triple Zero call was played to the court alongside body-worn camera footage from a police officer who attended the scene.

A photo of the woman's arm was also shown, depicting bruising above her right elbow.

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Nicky Winmar

Under questioning from Winmar's barrister, Dermot Dann KC, the woman accepted she did not tell the Triple Zero call taker nor the first officer what exactly happened.

She did not disclose the allegations Winmar had dragged her or that he spat in her face.

"I didn't do that deliberately," the woman told the court.

"I didn't want to relive it again because I had been sitting in that room absolutely broken by what had just happened."

The contested hearing will continue tomorrow.

Winmar became the first Aboriginal footballer to play 200 games in the AFL, finishing his career with 230 games at St Kilda and 21 for the Western Bulldogs.

He fought back against racism in his career, including standing in front of an abusive Collingwood crowd in 1993, lifting his jumper and proudly pointing at his skin.

Winmar is also co-leading a landmark racism class action against the AFL in the Victorian Supreme Court.

Support is available from the National Sexual Assault, Domestic and Family Violence Counselling Service at 1800RESPECT (1800 737 732).

Man in ‘serious condition’ after being stabbed in the street in Melbourne

A man is in a serious condition after being stabbed in broad daylight in Melbourne's CBD.

An investigation is under way after the injured man was found on Collins Street near the intersection of Elizabeth Street about 2.10pm today.

The 37-year-old man from Mill Park was taken to hospital, with Ambulance Victoria saying his condition is serious after he was stabbed in the upper body.

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No arrests have been made.

An investigation into the incident is ongoing.

An Ambulance Victoria spokesperson said paramedics assessed and treated one patient.

Witnesses should contact Crime Stoppers.

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Regional community in mourning after newborn found dead at campsite

A community in the NSW Riverina is grappling with grief and mounting questions after a newborn baby was found dead at a riverside campsite.

Emergency services were called to Cadell Place in Wagga Wagga on Saturday afternoon, where police found a 37-year-old woman and two infants. One of the babies had died.

The woman and the surviving infant were treated at the scene before being taken to Wagga Wagga Base Hospital.

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Police say there are no suspicious circumstances surrounding the incident, which occurred at a site along the Murrumbidgee River understood to be housing rough sleepers.

For Wagga Wagga City Councillor Richard Foley, the tragedy is the inevitable result of a regional housing crisis that has been allowed to spiral out of control.

"A pregnant woman should never have been sleeping in a tent on a riverbank in 2026… We have known for years that homelessness in Wagga Wagga has been escalating at an alarming rate," he told nine.com.au.

He's calling for an urgent review of what services had contact with the family and why safe accommodation was not secured, alongside immediate coordination between council, state and federal authorities.

At a broader level, Foley said more transitional housing and properly funded support services were needed on the ground, adding that councils alone could not address the magnitude of the issue.

NSW Housing and Homelessness Minister Rose Jackson described the death as "beyond comprehension" and confirmed a full investigation into the family's circumstances had been requested.

"This is truly heartbreaking news," she said.

"The death of any member of our homelessness community is tragic, but the death of a newborn baby is beyond comprehension."

Jackson said Homes NSW had been in contact with the family over some years and that discussions were underway with local representatives about what further action could be taken.

She pointed to the state's housing-first policy, including funding for new homes and expanded homelessness services, while acknowledging that incidents like this underscore the scale of the challenge.

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