While daily White House news conferences have become must-see political theater, the State Department has not held a press briefing since the day before Trump's inauguration.
The agency now has a chief diplomat, Secretary of State Rex Tillerson, but many of its senior posts remain unfilled and the oilman's daily business passes without public comment.
Of course, all US presidents set their own national security agenda, which is then executed by State, the Pentagon and America's alphabet soup of intelligence agencies.
Yesterday, 18 days after Trump's inauguration and six days after Tillerson was sworn in, State still had no chief spokesperson and no firm plans to resume daily briefings.
Acting spokesman Mark Toner, a career officer who was deputy spokesman under the previous administration, said there are no plans for this to change before at least the end of the week.
"We continue to work with the interagency and the White House, and look to resume daily press briefings at the soonest possible time," he told AFP.
But he made no comment on policy and has made none since.
Trump, meanwhile, held hands with Britain's prime minister, clashed with Australia's and made the first call in what he hopes will be beautiful friendship with Russia's President Vladimir Putin.
His ban on refugee arrivals and suspension of visas for visitors from seven mainly Muslim countries sent shockwaves around the world before a US court stepped in to halt it.
Since then, one event has been added, a meeting with Trump at the White House yesterday where he believed to have discussed the appointment of a deputy to help run the agency.
Tillerson has been in telephone contact with allied foreign ministers such as those from Australia, Japan and South Korea.
But the traditional press office readout of the calls came the next day, and contained little detail.
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