Letters from an American - November 17, 2025
Episode Date: November 18, 2025Get full access to Letters from an American at heathercoxrichardson.substack.com/subscribe...
Transcript
Discussion (0)
November 17th, 2025.
President Donald J. Trump spent the weekend flooding social media with posts claiming that his
economic policies are working and that his 34 felony convictions and the investigations into
his 2016 campaigns ties to Russian operatives were illegitimate, and posting angrily about those
people calling out his association with Jeffrey Epstein. He even reposted a statement from one of his
own lawyers saying, if Jeffrey Epstein had any dirt on Donald Trump, he would have had great leverage
in the criminal case against him at the time he died, which perhaps conveys a different message
than he intended. Then, after fighting furiously against the upcoming House vote over releasing the
Epstein files the FBI collected as part of its investigation into the convicted sex abuser.
At 9.15 p.m. last night, Trump abruptly reversed course, saying that House Republicans should vote
in favor of releasing the files because we have nothing to hide. I don't care, he posted.
But of course, he does care, as is evident from how deeply he fought the release of the files the FBI
collected during its investigation of Epstein, right up until the final signature on the House
discharge petition that would force the House to vote on a measure to require the Justice
Department to release the files. As Meredith Kyle of People magazine reported, when a female
Bloomberg reporter at a press gaggle aboard Air Force One, November 14th, asked him if there
was anything incriminating in the Epstein files. He pointed a finger in her.
face and said, quiet, quiet, Piggy.
In the hours before House Speaker Mike Johnson, a Republican of Louisiana, swore in Representative
Adelaide Grahalva, a Democrat of Arizona, at 4 o'clock on Wednesday, Trump and his loyalists
worked to pressure Representative Lauren Bobert, a Republican of Colorado, to remove her name from
the discharge petition. She refused. As soon as Johnson swore,
her into office, Grahalva signed the petition, teeing up a vote on a bill requiring the release
of the files.
On Thursday, November 13th, the people behind the White House social media account seemed
to be trying to combat the Epstein story by pushing the image of Trump as a happily married
family man.
The account posted an image of Trump and First Lady Melania Trump listening to the U.S.
Marine Band and Shaddle.
Then a video of Trump behind the Oval Office desk, giving a medallion and a pen each to four small children.
The caption read, The Best President with a heart emoji.
On Friday, November 14th, the White House social media account posted an image of Trump and the First Lady embracing.
Under the caption, I can't help falling in love with you, along with an emoji of musical notes and a heart.
Sunday, November 16th, it posted a picture of the two of them striding toward the cameras
holding hands, under the caption, America's power couple, with an eagle and an American flag
emoji.
That Trump's hand is weakening showed on Friday when the leader of the Indiana Senate announced
that it would not hold a meeting in December to gerrymander all nine of Indiana's districts
to favor Republicans.
Currently, the Indiana delegation to the House of Representatives has seven Republicans and two Democrats.
Trump and Indiana Governor Mike Braun have put great pressure on the legislature to redistrict.
But even though Republicans hold a supermajority in the Indiana legislature,
not enough Republican senators are willing to face the anger of voters to back the plan.
Then, over the weekend, rumors spread that as many as 100 House Republicans,
would vote in favor of the measure to force the release of the Epstein files.
Their constituents are eager for the release of the files,
which Trump promised on the campaign trail,
and the material already released from the Epstein estate
has been damaging enough that representatives have reason to worry
whether the material in the FBI files is even worse,
leaving them in the position of having defended that behavior
if they continue to cover it up.
On Sunday, Representative
Thomas Massey, a Republican of Kentucky, told Jonathan Carl of ABC News this week that he was hoping
to get a veto-proof majority in favor of the release. This is a big deal. The public outrage over
ABC's suspension of comedian Jimmy Kimmel's show in September demonstrated in a much more public
way than court losses had that the administration was not all-powerful. That outcry for
forced first ABC's parent company, Disney,
and then broadcast station owners
Next Star Media Group and Sinclair Broadcast Group,
to backtrack and to reinstate Kimmel's show.
While individual Republican lawmakers have groused
about one or another of the administration's actions,
only a few have broken with Trump.
He has generally been able to command loyalty
by threatening to sick his supporters
on those who step out of line,
and by warning that he will support primary challengers against them.
Notably, over the weekend, he hammered at one of those lawmakers,
his former loyalist Representative Marjorie Taylor Green, a Republican of Georgia,
calling her a traitor, wacky, and a ranting lunatic.
He said he was withdrawing his endorsement of her and would support another Republican to replace her.
His usual threats didn't work. Dozens of House Republicans,
Republicans still said they were going to vote in favor of releasing the Epstein files.
So to get back in front of the party, Trump suddenly called for lawmakers to pass the measure,
later telling reporters he would sign it if it came to his desk. Lawmakers who just hours before
had maintained they would vote no suddenly switched to yes, indicating that Trump still commands
many of them. But his change in direction makes it far more likely senators to
too will vote to pass the bill.
Tonight, Trump loyalist, Senator Tommy Tuberville,
a Republican of Alabama,
said he would vote for the measure.
Likely realizing a vote against it
will hurt him in his upcoming campaign for governor,
which is quite something considering Alabama's
previously strong support for Trump.
Don't hold your breath for the release of the files, though.
Trump's post saying he didn't care about the release
included the qualification
that the House Oversight Committee
can have whatever they are legally entitled to,
suggesting he will continue his stonewalling
with the help of the Department of Justice.
Remember, all the congressional machinations
are only to force the release of the files.
He could release them himself any time he wanted to.
On Sunday, Trump posted angrily
about the Indiana Republicans' failure to do his bidding.
Calling those Republican,
opponents of redistricting rhinos, or Republicans in name only, and accusing them of depriving
Republicans of a majority in the House, a very big deal. He went on. It's weak Republicans that
cause our country such problems. It's why we have crazy policies and ideas that are so bad for
America. He blamed Braun for not working the way he should to get the necessary votes and said,
Any Republican that votes against this important redistricting,
potentially having an impact on America itself, should be primaried.
He singled out two senators, one of whom had not publicly said he opposed the bill,
saying if they didn't do their job and do it now, let's get them out of office ASAP.
Hours later, one of the senators was the victim of a swatting incident,
in which the police department received an email falsely saying someone in the home had been harmed,
a malicious action designed to prompt police to launch a massive response to a potentially dangerous situation,
thus putting the victims in danger.
Trump seems to be losing his iron grip on the Republican Party.
Although Steve Peoples of the Associated Press reported yesterday that White House officials and U.S.
officials and other Washington, D.C. leaders say there is no affordability problem in the country.
Trump is popular, and the way to win in 2026 is to stick with him. Not everyone is so sure,
especially after the party's big losses earlier this month in elections across the country.
On Monday, November 11th, Fox News Channel personality Laura Ingram pushed Trump on issues that have
cost him support.
Although consumers have expressed concern over rising prices, Trump insisted that prices are way down.
Ingram asked, are you saying voters are misperceiving how they feel?
She took on the administration's recent call to address housing costs by issuing 50-year mortgages,
noting that the proposal has enraged your mag of friends,
who recognized that such a mortgage would benefit banks over buyers and nearly double
the time it would take for Americans to own a home.
Don't forget, MAGA was my idea, Trump defended himself.
MAGA was nobody else's idea.
I know what MAGA wants better than anybody else,
and MAGA wants to see our country thrive.
Yesterday, Trump defended right-wing podcaster Tucker Carlson,
who has been under fire for his interview platforming
white nationalist Nick Fuentes.
Fuentes traffics in racism and sexism,
and has openly admired Hitler,
insisting that many of the Republicans currently in office
are too moderate.
When the head of the Heritage Foundation,
once thought of as the intellectual heart
of the modern Republican Party,
supported Carlson, at least six people
resigned from the foundation,
expressing dismay at the direction it was taking.
Today, Representative Jared Golden,
Golden, a Democrat of Maine, announced that a bipartisan bill to repeal Trump's executive order
stripping the union rights from federal workers now has enough votes on a discharge petition
to bring it before the House. Golden and Representative Brian Fitzpatrick, a Republican
of Pennsylvania, introduced the bill in April, but Johnson refused to bring it up. In June,
Golden launched a discharge petition to force it to the floor.
Democrats and three Republicans signed the petition,
but it was still two votes short of adoption.
Today, Republican lawmakers Nick LaLotta and Mike Lawler of New York signed it,
bringing the number of signatures on the petition to 218.
Enough Republican members have joined with the Democrats to override,
Johnson and challenge Trump's executive order.
Letters from an American was written and read by Heather Cox Richardson.
It was produced at Soundscape Productions, Dead in Massachusetts.
Recorded with music composed by Michael Moss.
Thank you.
