Morning Wire - Russiagate Reckoning & Trump v. Powell | 7.25.25
Episode Date: July 25, 2025President Trump presses Jerome Powell with a personal visit to the Fed, DNI Tulsi Gabbard unveils new evidence in the Russiagate scandal, and Columbia settles with the Trump administration. Get the fa...cts first with Morning Wire. - - - Today's Sponsors: EarnIn - Type in Morning Wire under PODCAST when you sign up for EarnIn today by downloading in the Google Play or Apple App Store. Mosh - Head to https://moshlife.com/MORNINGWIRE to save 20% off plus FREE shipping on the Best Sellers Trial Pack or Plant Based Trial Pack. - - - Wake up with new Morning Wire merch: https://bit.ly/4lIubt3 - - - Privacy Policy: https://www.dailywire.com/privacy Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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President Trump makes another dramatic move,
personally inspecting the Federal Reserve as he ramps up pressure on Jerome Powell.
He's building a building.
He's $2.7 billion of a $900 million over on.
What is that?
The move comes as Trump touts more blockbuster trade deals.
I'm Daily Wire, Executive Editor John Bickley, with Georgia Howell.
It's Friday, July 25th, and this is Morning Wire.
New bombshell Russiagate revelations
spark a flurry of actions in the White House and on Capitol Hill.
Hill. We have the latest on the political fallout.
There is irrefutable evidence that detail how President Obama and his national security team
directed the creation of an intelligence community assessment that they knew was false.
And amid his ongoing battle with the Ivy League, Trump secures a historic settlement from Columbia.
You pay $200 million because you know you got caught red-handed, systematically discriminating against Jewish students.
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States. In a major escalation in his pressure campaign on the Federal Reserve, President Trump
personally toured the Fed building on Thursday, while his administration touts big economic wins.
Joining us now to discuss Trump's battle with Jerome Powell and big trade deal announcements as
Daily Wire's senior editor Cabot Phillips, A Cabot. So a pretty dramatic move yesterday from Trump.
Let's start there. What happened there? Well, first, John, I very much like your shirt.
Thank you. Very cool shirt. Anyways, so as we talked about on the show, the president has been furious
with Jerome Powell for months now, accusing him of intentionally keeping interest rates high to
try and damage the economy and damage Trump's political standing. But the problem for Trump is that he can
only fire Powell with cause, and policy disputes do not count. So he's been looking into the renovation
of the Federal Reserve headquarters, which Powell is overseeing. After a number of well-documented
cost over price tag on the project is over $2.5 billion, President Trump thinks that is far too
high, accusing Powell of mismanaging taxpayer dollars to build a, quote, palace for himself,
and hinting that he may have committed fraud, which obviously would be a fireable offense.
And now, as you mentioned, the president took the extraordinary step of visiting the Fed headquarters
himself yesterday. It is the first time a president has visited the building since 2006.
But unlike that visit, which George W. Bush took as part of the swearing-in ceremony for Ben Bernacki,
this one is all about putting pressure on Powell. For example, here's Trump directly telling the Fed chair
that he wants interest rates lowered.
Are there things the chairman can say to you today
that would make you back off some of the earlier criticism?
Well, I'd love him to lower interest rates.
Other than that, what can I tell you?
And later on, when Powell disputed the cost of this renovation,
President Trump displayed a piece of paper
with what he said was the price tag.
It looks like it's about $3.1 billion.
It went up a little bit or a lot.
So the 2.7 is now 3.1.
I'm not aware of that.
Yeah, it just came out.
Yeah, I haven't heard that from anybody.
This came from us?
Yes.
Now to another major economic topic, tariff deals with this deadline approaching very quickly.
We're seeing some urgency from some other countries to work deals.
What's the latest there?
So remember, the White House has made clear that any country who has not agreed to a trade deal by August 1st
will be hit with tariffs anywhere from 25 to 50%.
And a few countries seem to be taking Trump at his word, most notably Japan.
After eight rounds of intense negotiations, Trump announced a massive deal that will lower the tariff on Japanese imports from 25 to 15%.
In exchange, Tokyo has agreed to open their markets to American cars and trucks.
And perhaps even more importantly, Japan agreed to a $550 billion investment in the U.S. economy.
That'll include the purchase of 100 Boeing aircraft, billions of dollars in American rice, and billions more in deals with American defense contractors.
I just signed the largest trade deal in history.
I think maybe the largest deal in history with Japan.
A lot different from the deals in the past, I can tell you that.
Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnik talked about just how unique this deal is
and how Japan will actually be helping finance American growth.
The Japanese government says, I will finance, and I will pay for.
Right.
Not finance.
I will pay for.
You want to build a nuclear facility?
Build it.
You want to build 10 nuclear facilities.
You go build them.
You want to go build a pipeline.
You go build it.
And we'll split the lease payments.
90 for you.
10 for Japan.
It's a blockbuster if there ever was one.
All right.
So a major agreement with one of our biggest trading partners with some unique elements to it, too.
What other deals have we seen?
Right.
So we mentioned earlier the deal between the U.S. and the Philippines.
And now there's also an agreement between the U.S. and Indonesia.
As part of that deal, Indonesia has agreed to eliminate all tariffs on roughly 99% of
American goods and end pre-shipment inspections on American farm goods, also other non-tariff
barriers. In exchange, the U.S. will lower its tariff on Indonesian imports from 32 to 19%. And then,
according to numerous reports, President Trump is closing in on a final deal with the EU that will
impose 15% tariffs on a variety of European imports. All of that movement was more welcome news to
investors as global stocks rallied throughout the week. The S&P 500 hit yet another record high.
The Dow surged on Tuesday and Wednesday to near record highs.
Markets across Asia and Europe, especially Japan, jumped as well.
All right, so global markets looking very healthy there.
Cabot, thanks so much for reporting.
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In that election in November of 2016, they worked with their partners in the media to promote this lie,
ultimately to undermine the legitimacy of President Trump and launching what would be a years-long coup against him and his administration.
That was Director of National Intelligence, Tulsi Gabbard, releasing more bombs.
bombshell evidence that Obama and his Intel chiefs crafted the Trump-Russia collusion narrative.
Daily Wire reporter, Tim Pierce, is here to talk about what's in Gabbard's latest tranche of evidence.
So, Tim, a lot of accusations being leveled here.
First, we have a coup from an outgoing president.
And then from a declassified House Intelligence report, we've learned that Russia may have
actually helped Clinton.
So what's going on here?
Yeah, it's not so much about what Russia did, but what it didn't do.
According to this declassified report, Russia had obtained hacked DNC,
emails that incriminated Clinton showing potential criminal bribes. Under Clinton's leadership,
State Department officials took secret meetings with U.S. religious groups and offered taxpayer
funds in exchange for support for the Clinton campaign. Gabbard said there was also a patronage
network inside the U.S. State Department to bribe employees into supporting Clinton. And then there
are emails that suggest Clinton was not well. Here's Gabbard. There were high-level DNC emails
that detailed evidence of Hillary's quote, psycho-emotional problems, uncontrolled fits of end.
anger, aggression, and cheerfulness, and that then Secretary Clinton was allegedly on a daily
regiment of heavy tranquilizers.
So the claim here is that Moscow had all this dirt on Clinton, but never released it.
Gabbard said that Russia likely planned to use it against Clinton if she had won.
Now, as more of this information comes out, President Obama has been characterized as something
of a ringleader here.
What's the evidence for that?
It's quite a bit, actually.
I spoke to Jerry Dunleavy, the chief investigative correspondent at Just the News about this.
Here's what he said.
Obama was deeply involved in the Russia-Gate scandal.
He was aware of Clinton-Plan intelligence showing Hillary was trying to link Trump to the Russian hacking of the DNC.
He personally directed the creation of the intelligence community assessment in December 2016,
only after Trump had emerged victorious.
And he was involved in an Oval Office meeting in early January 2017, where he was made aware,
of some of the crossfire hurricane investigations efforts,
including targeting Mike Flynn.
So Obama had his fingerprints on this for months
before that January 2017 intelligence community assessment
made the fake Trump-Russia collusion narrative official.
Now, President Trump hasn't been shy
about leveling accusations.
Is there a crime here?
The Justice Department has assembled a task force
to figure that out.
Now, Gabbard has essentially accused Obama of treason.
Here's that.
I'm not an attorney, but as I've said previously,
when you look at the intent behind creating a fake manufactured intelligence document
that directly contradicts multiple assessments that were created by the intelligence community,
the expressed intent and what followed afterward can only be described as a years-long coup
and a treasonous conspiracy against the American people, our republic,
and an attempt to undermine President Trump's administration.
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Treason is obviously a serious charge, but I should note that to some, it also seems more for
effect than substance. National Review's Andrew McCarthy. We've had him on the show before for his
legal analysis. It's skeptical about real criminality here, even if it is sorted and dirty and corrupt.
He writes in his latest column on this scandal, quote, political smears and appalling misjudgments
are not violations of the criminal law absent some statutory federal offense. If there were
a criminal fence that fit, Gabbard and Trump would cite it rather than chanting treason. Now,
that is just one cautious legal analysis of the case. There's also many on the right who think
that there is real substance to these allegations. And this is, of course, being looked at now
by Attorney General Pam Bondi. So we'll see what she comes up with. Well, there was a recent poll
that showed about 60% of Democrats still believe Trump was a Russian asset. Tim, thanks for reporting.
Good to be on.
Columbia University agreed to pay a $200 million settlement to the government over accusations
that it failed to stop anti-Semitism on campus.
The Trump administration is still trying to reach a deal with Harvard,
but in the meantime, the two sides faced off in court this week.
Daily Wire reporter, Marita Lorty, is here with Moore Hay, Marade.
So first, can you tell us about this Columbia settlement?
Hi, John. Yes, so Columbia University announced Wednesday
that it has agreed to pay this massive settlement to the government
more than $200 million to restore the federal funding
that Trump administration froze over the anti-Semitism allegations against the Ivy League
school. Columbia will also pay an additional $21 million to the government to settle investigations
by the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission. The Trump administration called
