Consider This from NPR - How Trump is leveraging sports and sports culture for his political brand
Episode Date: December 28, 2025President Trump is using his position to access sporting events across the country and embed himself with teams and fans. And he’s leveraging sports and American sports culture to build up and ampli...fy his political brand. NPR’s Tamara Keith speak with Christine Brennan, a longtime sports columnist and author, about the president and the significance of his strong ties to sports.For sponsor-free episodes of Consider This, sign up for Consider This+ via Apple Podcasts or at plus.npr.org. Email us at considerthis@npr.org.This episode was produced by Jeffrey Pierre and Henry Larson. It was edited by Sarah Robbins, Dana Farrington and Rebekah Metzler. Our executive producer is Sami Yenigun.Learn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoicesNPR Privacy Policy
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This month, President Trump announced a new competition for young Americans.
In the fall, we will host the first ever Patriot Games, an unprecedented four-day athletic event featuring the greatest high school athletes.
One young man and one young woman from each state and territory will participate, he said.
For the president, it's just the latest example of his keen interest in aligning his name with sports and sporting events.
Trump had been in office less than a month when he went to.
to the Super Bowl, making him the first sitting president to attend the big game.
When Trump came up on the Jumbotron during the national anthem, he was met with a mix of cheers and jeers.
A week later, he was at the Daytona 500. Then there was the U.S. Open, the Ryder Cup, two UFC matches in all more
than a dozen major sporting events so far this year. He even went into the Fox broadcast booth,
during a Washington Commanders game.
And let's see, we have a very important,
I think this is a very important couple of plays.
Here we go.
It's a complete turnaround from his first term
when Trump had to cancel a White House celebration
for the Super Bowl-winning Philadelphia Eagles
because so few players wanted to attend.
Now, seven years later,
he hosts love fest with athletes in the Oval Office.
Clay Travis is the founder of the sports website Outkick,
and he's written a book about Trump.
Trump's sports and politics.
He said earlier this year when he flew on Air Force One with Trump, the president had
Fox News on one TV and a UFC match on the other.
He's a huge sports fan.
Like, this isn't fake.
I think a lot of politicians pretend to be sports fans because they're trying to connect
with the regular guy or regular gal out there who is a sports fan and it makes them seem
like a normal person.
I think this is Trump.
Consider this. President Trump is using his position to access sporting events across the country
and embed himself with teams and fans. He's leveraging sports and American sports culture
to build up and amplify his political brand.
It's Consider This from NPR.
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For President Trump, sporting events are a combination of good fun and good publicity.
A senior White House official tells NPR that clips of the president at sporting events go, quote, insanely viral.
Christine Brennan is a longtime sports columnist at USA Today and author of On Her Game.
And she's here with us to discuss the president and his strong ties to sports.
Welcome. Tam, it's great to be with you. Thank you. So, Christine, you have been covering the intersection between sports and Donald Trump off and on for a very long time now. What do you make of that relationship? Well, you're right about the long time. I actually covered something, Tam, in 1989, called The Tour to Trump. Long forgotten. Yes, bicycle race. Literally no one remembers maybe except me. And that ended in Atlantic City. And I was there at the press conference where Donald
Trump was awarding the winner of the trophy, again, a short-lived bike race. But the point is that
Donald Trump has inserted himself and sponsored and supported sports in a way that I believe
no other U.S. President ever has. It takes it to a whole new level. And Donald Trump's message,
whether people like it or not, well, they see him at a sporting event and they might have a good
feeling about him as they see him on the field or giving out awards or whatever he's doing. So
I think that's what Donald Trump has realized. And then, of course, the big one for Donald Trump, the golf courses, 16 golf courses that already exist that he owns. And then five more are coming soon, according to the Trump website. So again, a man who is involved in sports, almost as much as he's involved in politics on some days. And that's a remarkable thing to say.
Can you just talk a little bit about his version of sports fandom, though?
Because some people who are critical of him would say, is he even a fan of a single team?
Does he root for anyone?
As far as I know, I have not seen him root for anyone, although he owned the USFL team.
And that's when he had Herschel Walker on his USFL team.
So clearly, you know, if he owns something, I guess he's a fan of it.
And that's where he wants to insert himself in sports as this national pastime.
He has fun with sports.
It's the competition that he loves.
And, of course, it's the cameras and the limelight that he gets.
So I think sports gives Donald Trump so much of what he wants as a human being and certainly as a politician.
And he loves a winner.
Oh, Donald Trump always wants to attach himself to winners.
he's everywhere. And because he has social media, the way that, you know, President's going back, obviously had no megaphone the way he does, he can insert himself there in a way that sports fans are all over social media, so they're reading every word. Even if he's not at the games, Donald Trump is making himself known in the sports world.
I'm thinking about one particular event that happened this past year, the FIFA World Cup club finals where President Trump was there to present the Trump.
trophy, and then he didn't leave the stage. And he was just there with the players. Exactly. He
wouldn't leave. And Gianni Infantino, the FIFA president, was ushering him off the stage and Trump
stayed with the trophy lift. And he just wanted to be a part of all of it. So, you know, he's in the
pictures. He's in the videos. What this portends, potentially, for the FIFA Men's World Cup,
next summer in the United States, also Mexico and Canada, and also.
Also then for the L.A. Olympics in 2028, Trump will still be president then. What does this portend in terms of what Trump's role will be and how he will insert himself in ways that we have never, ever seen a U.S. president do before?
Yeah. As you say, 26 and then 2028, this is going to be a huge presidency for sports. You now have the Patriot Games. The U.S. is hosting the World Cup.
Trump is hosting a UFC fight night on the South Lawn of the White House.
The following year, you'll have the NFL draft in Washington, D.C., on the National Mall, and then the Olympics.
So what are you watching for?
Certainly the stars have aligned on the sports calendar perfectly for Donald Trump.
Again, presidents have played golf.
Presidents had college sports backgrounds.
Gerald Ford comes to mind.
Ronald Reagan.
even, you know, going back to Teddy Roosevelt, he actually saved football by having the forward
pass invented back in 1905. But, you know, I think again with Donald Trump, it has worked out
absolutely perfectly for him. At these events, whether they're national events or international
events, in the United States, or even if he decides to travel around the world and go to
certain other sporting events, then the focus will be on Donald Trump more than it would ever be on
any president, whether it's the opening match or the final match, or again, the Olympic Games in
L.A., where we can only imagine what he might want to do, then the cameras will be on him
much more than they would normally be on a president. This is his moment. Donald Trump has
lived his entire life to have the good fortune and great luck to have these big sports events
come right to his doorstep, and he's going to take full advantage of that. And we are talking about
billions of eyeballs, billions of people watching these events around the world.
Oh, for sure. I mean, they estimate that five billion people watch the Paris
2024 Summer Olympic Games. And the FIFA World Cup will have billions as well.
So it's an audience unlike any other. There's no other venue, no other endeavor that will have
the eyeballs that these sporting events will.
Christine Brennan is a longtime sports columnist at USA Today and author,
of the book on Her Game. Thanks for being with us. Oh, my pleasure. Thanks so much.
This episode was produced by Jeffrey Pierre and Henry Larson. It was edited by Sarah
Robbins, Rebecca Metzler, and Dana Farrington. Our executive producer is Sammy Yinnigan.
It's Consider This from NPR. I'm Tamara Keith.
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