Robert Gilbert in the Press
Is a 20 second handwash enough to kill Covid-19?
Thomas Gilbert, an associate professor of chemistry and chemical biology at Northeastern University in Boston, Massachusetts, says coronavirus’s chemical make-up can be disrupted by nothing more specialised than cheap soap and warm water.
CBS News
Why the 25th Amendment won’t be used to remove Trump
“How do you demonstrate someone is psychologically unsound?” Robert Gilbert, a professor at Northeastern University and an authority on the 25th Amendment, told CBS News last year. This is still an open question, and unless Mr. Trump submits to a thorough examination by a team of unbiased mental health professionals, it’s not one with an […]
The New Yorker
How Trump could get fired
There has been considerable speculation about Trump’s physical and mental health, in part because few facts are known. During the campaign, his staff reported that he was six feet three inches tall and weighed two hundred and thirty-six pounds, which is considered overweight but not obese. Secrecy about a President’s health has a rich history. […]
Ozy
The worst decision Ronald Reagan ever made
Bush remained acting president until after 7 p.m. that evening while Reagan remained under the effects of the anesthesia and postoperative painkillers. But was that long enough, and did Reagan rush his recovery in a way that could have compromised his presidency in the ensuing days? Robert E. Gilbert, a political scientist at Northeastern University […]
Ozy
The presidents who changed course in office
Similarly, after Calvin Coolidge’s 16-year old son, Calvin Jr., died in 1924 from blood poisoning that set in when a blister on his foot went untreated, the president was consumed by grief and virtually disabled by clinical depression for the remainder of his presidency. “His son’s death did not change his viewpoint on the substance […]
Media File
Is the president too powerful? Ask the media
This over-coverage creates the perception for the viewer that we are a “presidential nation,” as Robert Glibert of Northeastern University puts it. Gilbert maintains that that understanding “is affecting both popular perceptions and power relationships on the national level.”
The Week
What happened to America under previous ‘hands-off’ presidents? Civil war and financial collapse.
To his admirers, like Reagan and the business site CheckWriters, this shows that Coolidge “was no micromanager,” and his famous habit of “empowering his Cabinet officials” meant his “Roaring ’20s White House was never bogged down by process” and therefore “functioned like a well-oiled Model T Ford.” And that was probably true in his first […]
Trump’s Dr. Oz appearance has nothing to do with health
But how healthy the candidates are (or aren’t) may not matter much anyway. Many presidents hid their ailments: JFK and Addison’s disease, FDR and polio, Woodrow Wilson’s stroke, Grover Cleveland’s mouth cancer. For the most part, says Robert Gilbert, a political scientist at Northeastern University, their presidencies went fine—their illnesses had little impact on their ability […]
Boston Herald
Battenfeld: Hillary Clinton’s ills become campaign’s focus
Clinton’s campaign, in fact, already misled the public about her diagnosis — first she was overheated, then dehydrated, then, oh yeah, we forgot to mention that little pneumonia diagnosis from last week. “I think they would have been smart to disclose it (immediately),” said Robert Gilbert, professor emeritus of political science at Northeastern University and […]
ABC News
Five Ways Kennedy’s Assassination Changed Presidential Security Forever
2. The End of the Presidential ‘Stroll’ Before JFK’s assassination, presidents had much more freedom to travel around the capital without extreme protective detail. President Coolidge was known for his regular constitutionals around Washington, D.C., most often only accompanied by one body guard. Additionally, President Truman was also famous for his frequent walks around the […]









