Letters from an American - October 30, 2025
Episode Date: October 31, 2025Get full access to Letters from an American at heathercoxrichardson.substack.com/subscribe...
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October 30th, 2025 House Speaker Mike Johnson, a Republican of Louisiana continues to try to pin the upcoming catastrophic lapse in supplemental nutrition assistance program or SNAP funding on the Democrats.
But with the U.S. Department of Agriculture sitting on $6 billion in funds, Congress,
appropriated for just such an event. The Treasury, finding $20 billion to prop up Trump ally
Javier Malay in Argentina, Johnson refusing to bring the House into regular session to negotiate an end to
the government shutdown, and President Donald J. Trump demanding $230 million in damages from the American
taxpayer, bulldozing the east wing of the White House to build a gold-plated ballroom that will dwarf the
existing White House, and traveling to Asia, where South Korean leadership courted him by giving
him a gold crown and serving him brownies topped with edible gold. Blaming any funding shortfall
on Democrats is a hard sell. According to a Washington Post ABC survey, more Americans blame Trump
and congressional Republicans for the shutdown than blame Democrats by a margin of 45 to 33. And Trump's
approval rating continues to move downward, with the presidential approval average reported
by 50 plus 1 at 41.3% approval and 55.1% disapproval, a negative 14 split. G. Eliot Morris of
strengthened numbers noted on October 24th that polls show Americans now trust Democrats more
than Republicans to handle the economy well. Trump ran in 2024 with a promised
to bring down inflation, which was then close
to the Federal Reserve's target of 2.0%.
Now core inflation is at 3%, having gone up every month since April.
Halloween candy on people's minds today
is at 9.8% inflation and costs 44% more
than it did in 2019.
Federal Reserve Board Chair Jerome Powell
sure sounded like he was describing stagflation,
a condition when the economy
stagnates despite inflation, when he said yesterday, in the near term, risks to inflation are tilted
to the upside and risks to employment to the downside, a challenging situation.
Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said today that while the stock market has done well this year,
a better economy is going to start flowing through to working Americans next year.
Meanwhile, on Tuesday, in a rambling and disjointed speech in Japan, Trump told U.S. military personnel
that he is federalizing National Guard troops and sending them into Democratic-led cities
because we're going to have safe cities. In the same speech, Trump repeatedly attacked
former President Joe Biden and insisted yet again that the 2020 presidential election was rigged.
It was not.
When asked by a reporter later to clarify his remarks, Trump referred back to the Insurrection Act,
saying that if he invoked it, I'd be allowed to do whatever I want.
But we haven't chosen to do that because we're doing very well without it.
But I'd be allowed to do that. You understand that.
And the courts wouldn't get involved. Nobody would get involved.
And I could send the Army, Navy, Navy, Air Force, Marines. I can send anybody I wanted.
In fact, a president can invoke the accurately named Insurrection Act only in times of insurrection or rebellion.
Neither of those conditions exists.
But the administration is working hard to create the impression that they do.
Drew Harwell and Joyce Soyan Lee of the Washington Post reported yesterday that the videos the Department of Homeland Security has been publishing
to demonstrate the administration's triumph over crime in U.S. cities.
as its agents work day and night to arrest, detain, and deport vicious criminals, have been doctored.
They do not represent current actions, but rather are a hash of video from different states and different times.
When the reporters asked the White House about the misleading footage,
spokesperson Abigail Jackson told them that the Trump administration will continue to highlight the many successes of the president's
agenda through engaging content and banger memes on social media.
Their signs the administration is not just trying to give
the impression that Americans are rioting,
but is trying to push them to do so.
Aaron Glantz of The Guardian reported yesterday
that on October 8th, Major General Ronald Burkett,
who directs the Pentagon's National Guard Bureau,
ordered the National Guard in all the states,
U.S. territories,
and the District of Columbia to form quick reaction forces trained in riot control.
Most states are required to train 500 National Guard personnel for a total nationwide of 23,500.
The forces are supposed to be in place by January 1st, 2026. In his order,
Burkett relied on an executive order Trump signed on August 25, calling on the Secretary of Defense to,
immediately begin ensuring that each state's Army National Guard and Air National Guard
are resourced, trained, organized, and available to assist federal, state, and local law
enforcement in quelling civil disturbances and ensuring the public safety and order, and ensure
the availability of a standing National Guard quick reaction force that shall be resourced,
trained, and available for rapid nationwide deployment.
In August, the administration planned for two groups of 300 troops to be stationed in Alabama
and Arizona as a domestic civil disturbance quick reaction force.
Now that number is 23,500 and the troops will be in every state and territory.
The establishment of a domestic quick reaction force to quell civil
disturbances, at a time when there are no civil disturbances that can't be handled easily by existing law enforcement, suggests the administration is expecting those conditions to change.
That expectation might have something to do with Monday's story from Anna Gerrattelli of the Washington Examiner that the White House is reassigning ice field officers and replacing them with officers from Customs and Border Patrol, or CBP.
Greg Wainer and Bill Malugian of Fox News reported that the shift will affect at least eight cities, including Los Angeles, San Diego, Phoenix, Denver, Portland, Philadelphia, El Paso, and New Orleans.
White House officials, presumably led by White House Deputy Chief of Staff Stephen Miller, who has said the administration intends to carry out a minimum of 3,000 arrests a day, are frustrated by the current.
pace of about 900 a day. So those officials, including Homeland Security Secretary Christy
Noem, Special Government Employee and Noem advisor, Corey Lewandowski, and Greg Bovino, a Border Patrol
sector chief who has been overseeing the agency's operations in Los Angeles and Chicago,
have decided to ramp up those deportations by replacing ICE officials with far more aggressive
CBP leaders. Tripling arrests will likely bring pushback. Michael Scherer, Missy Ryan, and Ashley Parker of the Atlantic
reported today that political appointees Stephen Miller, Christy Noem, Defense Secretary Pete Hegesith,
and Secretary of State Marco Rubio have moved onto military bases. The designs of the anti-immigrant
leaders in the administration dovetail with Trump's political designs. Trump has talked a lot about
serving a third term in the presidency, most recently talking about it to reporters on Air Force One
earlier this week. The 22nd Amendment to the Constitution prohibits a third term. But Trump
ally Stephen Bannon told the economist last week that Trump is going to be president in 28
and people just ought to get accommodated with that.
Bannon claimed there's many different alternatives
to get around the 22nd Amendment.
Trump keeps Trump-2020 campaign hats
on bookshelves outside the Oval Office.
Janessa Goldbeck, the chief executive officer
of the nonprofit Vet Voice Foundation,
told Guardian reporter Glantz that Birkett's recent order
shows an attempt by the president to normalize
a national militarized police force. Such a force has not just military, but also electoral power.
It could be used in Democratic-led states to suppress voting. In a worst-case scenario, Goldbeck said,
the president could declare a state of emergency and say that elections are rigged and use
allegations of voter fraud to seize the ballots of secure voting centers.
Today, Buckingham Palace announced that King Charles has initiated a formal process to remove the style, titles, and honors of Prince Andrew over his relationship with convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein and participation in activities surrounding Epstein.
Andrew will be stripped even of his title of Prince and will be forced to leave the home he has shared for more than 20 years with his X, Y,
Sarah Ferguson at Royal Lodge, a 30-room mansion located in Windsor Great Park.
The palace said these censures are deemed necessary, notwithstanding the fact that he continues to deny
the allegations against him. Today, Jim Acosta reported that survivors of Epstein's sex
trafficking enterprise have written a letter to Speaker Johnson, demanding that
Representative-elect Adelaideh Grijalva, a Democrat of Arizona, be sworn into office.
Voters elected Grijalva on September 23rd, but Johnson has steadfastly refused to swear her in.
Grahalla has said she will provide the last signature necessary on a discharge petition to force a vote on the public release of the Epstein files,
an outcome that threatens to expose how and why Trump was named as a result.
those files. The survivors write that Johnson's continued refusal to seat her is an
unacceptable breach of democratic norms and a disservice to the American people. Even more
concerning to us as survivors, this delay appears to be a deliberate attempt to block her
participation in the discharge petition that would force a vote to unseal the Epstein-Maxwell
files. The American public has a right
to transparency and accountability, and we, as survivors, deserve justice.
Any attempt to obstruct a vote on this matter by manipulating House procedure or denying
elected members their seats is a direct affront to that right and adds insult to our trauma.
Letters from an American was written and written and
read by Heather Cox Richardson.
It was produced at Soundscape Productions, Dead in Massachusetts.
Recorded with music composed by Michael Moss.
