The Opinions - 'Is the Destruction the Point?': Three Opinion Writers on Trump's First 50 Days
Episode Date: March 12, 2025President Donald Trump is about halfway through his first 100 days in office. In this episode of The Opinions, Patrick Healy talks with the columnist Michelle Goldberg and contributor Frank Bruni abou...t the moments that have defined Trump’s second term so far and what his first 50 days portend for the rest of Trump’s second term.Thoughts? Email us at theopinions@nytimes.com You can find transcripts (posted midday) and more episodes of “The Opinions” at nytimes.com/column/the-opinions.This episode of “The Opinions” was produced by Jillian Weinberger. Edited by Kaari Pitkin and Alison Bruzek. Fact-checking by Mary Marge Locker and Kate Sinclair. Mixing by Sonia Herrero. The show’s production team also includes Derek Arthur and Vishakha Darbha. Original music by Aman Sahota, Isaac Jones and Carole Sabouraud. Audience strategy by Kristina Samulewski and Shannon Busta. The Director of New York Times Opinion Audio is Annie-Rose Strasser. Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.
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This is The Opinions, a show that brings you a mix of voices from New York Times Opinion.
You've heard the news. Here's what to make of it.
I'm Patrick Healy, Deputy Editor of New York Times Opinion.
And this is the first 100 days, a weekly series examining President Trump's use of power and his drive to change America.
Okay, so we're now halfway through Trump's first 100, the onslaught of executive orders, executive pardons, executive mrs.
executive muscle flexing to fire anyone Trump wants and close agencies.
We're seeing an unprecedented use of the word unprecedented.
And this week we're seeing a president who promised a golden age of economic growth
actually steering America toward a recession with his chaotic tariff policies.
It's sometimes hard to find the language to meet the moment.
So I wanted to talk to two of my colleagues, opinion columnist,
Michelle Goldberg, an opinion contributor, Frank Bruny, to try to make sense of it all.
Michelle Goldberg, Frank Bruny, thanks for being here.
Patrick, thanks.
Great to be with you, Patrick.
So since we're at the halfway mark through 100 days, I'd love to hear from each of you
about an issue or person or moment that you think defines how Trump has used power during these
first 50 days. Michelle, do you want to start? Sure. I mean, there's a few, but one that stands out for me
is the gutting of USAID, both because it's illegal, it's so flagrantly immoral and so utterly
self-destructive. You know, during the first Trump term, I would sometimes have to catch myself because
even though I thought and think that Trump is uniquely despicable and dangerous, the fact remains that if you just want to look at kind of the lives lost and global damage done, George W. Bush really outstripped him.
Trump was maybe a worst person, but the damage that he did was much more contained to the United States.
And I think that in the second Trump term, he's changed that very quickly.
I mean, not just by taking America's soft power in all sorts of ways and setting it on fire,
but really making these abrupt decisions that are going to kill, you know, hundreds of thousands,
maybe more than a million people and doing it in this incredibly arbitrary, careless way.
And I just want to see something really quick before we get to France.
I have a 12-year-old son who, as he learns more about, you know, various kind of dark chapters in American history, can get really down on this country. And so I find myself often in the strange position of trying to talk up American greatness because I don't want him to feel despair about the country that he's growing up in. And it's occurred to me that every single thing that I have pointed out to him as a sign of American greatness or goodness, whether that be foreign aid, whether that be
our support for Ukraine, our success in welcoming immigrants and refugees, you know, our kind of
of scientific preeminence. Everything that I thought was best about America, Trump has either
destroyed or tried to destroy in less than two months. It's really interesting to hear, Michelle,
talk about that because I don't have children. And I feel so much despair and fear and heartache about
what's going on. And I often do wonder, what do you say to children at this time? How do you
maintain their optimism and their belief that they do live in a special country? So that's fascinating
for me to hear. The two things that stand out to me are related, and they have to do with a culture
of intimidation that President Trump has created. Among all that's happened, these seem like
the clearest baby steps or not even baby steps towards something like autocracy. I think of what
happened on day one, and I worry that because it happened on day one in such a blizzard of
activity that it's gotten lost, but granting pardons, clemency of various kinds to the
1500, 1600 defendants in the January 6 cases. That was an extraordinary and chilling,
chilling thing. And what it said to those who would support him or who steadfastly support him
is there will be a reward to being on Team Trump. And at the same time, another thing that's
been forgotten, I think, too much, is his withdrawal of the security details from Mike Pompeo,
from John Bolton, and from a few others. These were people who were facing credible death threats
from Iran because of their service to the United States. Because of their service to Donald Trump.
Correct. And that was so extraordinary. I remember I was here at Duke where I teach Maggie Haberman
came down to do a panel. And when I asked it a question, like, what has surprised you? The only thing that
had really surprised her, she said, and had chilled her to the bone was that, was the withdrawal of the
security details, because it was such an exercise of brute power. But I mentioned those two things
because they're entwined, and it's about a system of rewards and punishments that says,
if you counterman me, if you contradict me, if you speak against me, there will be consequences,
but if you go along with me, if you do as I please, there will be rewards.
Michelle makes me think of your great column this week about what's happening at Columbia University. I mean, listening to Frank, also thinking about your point about USAID, are Americans only safe if we're on Donald Trump's side?
So I think that there's probably a scale of exposure. And I think that the arrest of Mahmoud Khalil, who was a leader in the Columbia protests against Israel last year,
He's someone who, you know, he has a green card.
He's married to an American.
He's expecting a baby soon.
The idea that someone can be taken away arbitrarily, I mean, it certainly means that people
with green cards of whom there's, you know, about 13 million have fewer protections than
they did a few months ago.
Because until very recently, it was sort of settled law that if you were inside the country
and particularly if you were somebody who had a green card, you had the same
constitutional protections as American citizens. That is clearly no longer the case. And so you might
think, well, I'm safe because I'm an American citizen. But I think that what this shows is that a
government that is this willing to ignore free speech protections for one group obviously can't be
counted on to uphold them for the rest of us. Frank, do you think that, you think that
that Trump actually cares about any of this destruction that he's undertaking, or is the destruction
the point? By which I mean, I'm not sure if Donald Trump really cares about foreign aid and soft power,
and I'm not sure he really cares if he's putting John Bolton at risk or not. I feel like he left the first term and entered the second term,
wanting to be a doer. That's the action that's the thing.
I could not agree with you more. I don't think he has a coherent value structure, as most of us understand it. And I think we're seeing a president who's operating without anything any of us would recognize as a conscience, truly. It is about showing what he can get away with. It's about showing his enemies what that they supported he can tear down. I mean, it is all about a display of brute strength. He gets off on that. And in that sense, it seems not so much an autocracy, but a flexocracy.
Let me show you how I can flex my bicep as I use it to power my fist coming into your face.
I mean, that's what it feels like.
Just to kind of build on what Michelle was talking about is we're seeing clear violations of free speech, right?
I mean, you know we're in that territory when Anne Coulter, who is, as she said in a social media post, that she's for almost every deportation.
But wait a second, what's happening with Mahmoud Khalil feels like a clear violation of the First Amendment.
When Anne Coulter's raising that point in this context, you know we've strayed onto some very,
very interesting and dangerous territory. But it's so fascinating to me, Patrick and Michelle,
that many of Trump's supporters in the middle, for lack of a better word, said, you know,
we want free speech. We're tired of cancel culture. We're tired of the language policing on the left.
And there are legitimate complaints there for absolute sure. But what we're getting in return
is not free speech. We're getting a different kind of censorship. And we're getting a different kind of censorship.
different kind of approved speech. And that goes back to your question, Patrick. It's not about
any coherent values. It's not about any North Star. It's about showing that you can turn the boat
180 degrees around, that you can do whatever you want, and you can bring the people who opposed you
and were against you to their knees. Well, and I also think free speech means something different for
someone like Elon Musk than it does for a civil libertarian, right? It means that I get to say whatever I
want without restriction, and you have to listen and you have to take it, right? And I'm the one who
kind of has the power to redefine terms, not you. And so there's this kind of glorying in
seizing the power that they felt the left was exercising unfairly. And for some people, that's what
free speech was really about. It was about a system of social norms that provided kind of maximum
grace towards the most powerful people in society.
At the same time, when you talk about people in the middle,
there's also just like a lot of people in this country
who do not like being told what to say.
And it's really interesting that one of the most unpopular things
that Trump has done, if you look at polls,
is try to make people call the Gulf of Mexico, the Gulf of America.
Michelle, I want to pick up on your point about Elon Musk.
Now, I have been more guilty than most in commissioners.
Lots of op-eds, columns on Elon Musk in the last 50 days.
But I really think he has been the story.
He's my pick for this first halfway point.
And it's not just his chainsaw for the government.
I think Musk is bad disruption personified.
And I think more than anyone, he set the tone for this administration in throwing out ideas, crazy ideas, to provoke and change.
America. I think Elon Musk is at war with America as we know it. I think he sees the government,
media, and academia as proxies for the Democratic Party. He wants to break them. He wants to
redefine society as a two-gender deal. He doesn't like NATO. He doesn't like the UN. He's all for
grabbing natural resources like Greenland and earth minerals in Ukraine. He doesn't care about
allies because he's a completely unilateral mindset person. And I just, I get the sense he wants
to break the back of America to rebuild it to his specs. In some ways, the person who best understands
this, as much as I hate to say it, is Steve Bannon, who has talked about Musk, you know,
being a techno-futalist. And I do think that that is a pretty accurate picture of where he wants
to take us. And I also think that's one reason why this administration
has been so different in some ways.
And it's because Trump is fundamentally, for all his hyperactivity, he's also sort of lazy
and hands off in a lot of ways.
Yes, yes.
And he thinks among, he sees Musk as, you know, a glorious, successful businessman, right?
Right.
And so the people who are actually running a lot of the government day to day in the first
Trump administration were sort of normal Republicans, some of them who thought of themselves
as people who were protecting the government from Donald Trump.
And at the time, I thought that they were doing us a disservice by cropping him up and kind of shielding the country from the consequences of electing someone like Donald Trump is president.
And I think that this second term has really borne that out.
It made people very complacent about putting such an erratic figure in charge of the most powerful country in the world.
And so now instead of them running the day-to-day operations of the government, it's,
both a bunch of Project 2025 ideologues, but also Elon Musk and his band of feral children.
People keep talking about the feral children, Michelle, but I see it differently.
I think of them as world builders.
I think of them as like all these like Tolkien kind of like kids who want to rebuild a world in, you know, the shape of Musk.
and they're willing to drive the economy into a ditch if they need to.
I mean, the notion that it's all just, you know, kids running around accessing our data and they don't know what they're doing,
I feel like I'm a little worried that they do actually know what they're doing.
Well, I think it depends on what you're doing in terms of wanting to cripple the quote-unquote deep state,
but sort of why these systems exist in the first place.
I don't think they understand.
I mean, and you see that with Musk being like, you know,
oh, we made a mistake. We fired the people who were trying to halt the spread of Ebola. But then we hired them back. I mean, of course, he didn't. You know, none of that has been reconstructed. So actually, I don't think that in many cases they know what they're doing.
Frank, can I ask you about where Trump fits into this? Because I think of Trump as someone who was so hyper-confident, so narcissistic, you know, he's his own person. But I think he's also taking.
with the idea of world building.
I think he very much wants Greenland,
and he's going to try to manifest, you know, that into being.
But what I don't understand is, is Trump his own person
or like Michelle was getting at,
is he kind of a lazy, half-checked-out guy
who's happy to sit back and watch, you know,
Elon and Rubio get into it,
and Elon smash and grab and just see where it takes us,
even if it takes us into, you know,
an economic ditch.
Well, it's a little bit of both.
I mean, he likes to sit back, I think, that's clear and watch Musk and Rubio Tangle.
But he sits back knowing that they're tangling because they're both in his good graces for
the time being.
They're tangling because he put them in positions where they have some kind of power and agency
and investment to tangle.
To him so much as a show, I mean, at the end of that disgraceful, shocking meeting in the
Oval Office, you know, with him, Vance, and Zelens,
I believe one of his final,
yeah, I believe one of his final comments was he turned to someone and said,
that'll make great television, huh?
The significance of that comment is immense.
He sees so much of this as a spectacle.
He's staging a spectacle for Americans.
He's staging a spectacle for his own amusement.
And Musk, I think it's interesting, Patrick, that you keyed in on him.
I think where he and Trump are complete doppelgangers is in their understanding of power
and what should be done with it.
And one of the fundamental changes here
is it used to be, to some extent,
imperfectly, in America,
we saw the measure of power
as being our grace.
Our stature was reflected
in how big and generous
a player we could be on the world stage
with generous being part of the mix.
To Trump and Musk,
and you mentioned Greenland,
power is acquisition.
Power is bringing people
who disagree with you into submission.
Power is just basically concentrating
as much influence and wealth around you as you can.
And that is diametrically opposed,
at least to the story we used to tell ourselves
about America and power.
I find myself both nodding along
and also feeling like we just lack the language
to talk about what Trump is doing to our country.
I hear so many days.
Democrats talk about Trump as an authoritarian or an autocrat or make comparisons to Putin.
And I just wonder, is that adequate to the moment? Does that fully capture it? Does this man just
defy historical comparison or comparison in the world stage? When people say, well, the test of a
constitutional crisis is going to be whether Trump defies an order from the Supreme Court,
does that language even capture it, or is the language that I'm kind of groping for, a language about a country where so many people just may not care whether Trump defies an order or not?
Right. I mean, there's two different levels, right? There's on the one hand, is the language accurate? And on the other, does the language kind of meet the moment or communicate to people the danger that we're in?
Yes.
I mean, I think that in terms of historical parallels, obviously none are exact, but there's a lot.
And, you know, as I kind of say in my column, I really have to ration my Hanna-Arant references because, you know, otherwise I would just be constantly larding my columns with citations from the origins of totalitarianism.
So it is true that there is a sense of profound apathy.
And, you know, one of the kind of right-wing views that I've maybe come around to in the course of the last abominable decade is that we do need more.
classical civic education because without it, it's very hard to communicate to people why these,
you know, various kind of limitations on the government and separation of powers and the like is worth
preserving and is worth being alarmed about when it's destroyed.
I don't think there are tidy comparisons. And I think it's the overwhelming fact of that,
that is what has so many people sort of numb and tuned out and feeling sort of helpless or just not
really paying attention. To begin to like really look hard at Trump's indecencies, at his overreach,
at his defiance of the law, at his contempt for, you know, I'm going to use the word norms,
and that's a perfect example of how language fails us. But to start staring at that hard and long
is to end up in a black hole from which you can never escape. And I bet you all.
all three of us kind of feel that emotionally after years of writing and talking about this.
And so I do think there are many Americans who, because it's so impossible to comprehend,
because the immensity of the departure from past presidents and from the American past is such
that they just really end up concentrating all their worries on the price of eggs.
We in the media who are paid to spend time thinking about and analyzing all of this,
one of our greatest shortcomings is we forget how many Americans have these overstuffed stress days
in which if they have half an hour to follow the news, that's a lot. And Donald Trump and Steve Bannon,
I mentioned him because he's the big proponent of the flood the zone strategy. They're counting on that.
They know that. Yes. Yes, I think that's right. And they know that a lot of those people aren't sitting around
debating the finer points of what a constitutional crisis is. I do wonder,
though, in terms of that numbing, I mean, maybe what's going on with the economy will start shaking some more people out of this?
I mean, it's not just the markets.
I think it already has to some degree, right?
I mean, around the edges, but you already see Trump's approval rating, which was positive for the first few weeks of his administration, is already underwater, although only slightly.
his numbers in polls on the economy are pretty bad.
And the information environment is so bad that it's not clear to me how much people are making the connection between, say, you know, Trump saying that he can't rule out a recession and the value of their retirement portfolio crashing.
I mean, this was, I thought it was a remarkable moment in the last couple of days when Trump retweeted.
something for our retruthed God, something from
on his truth social thing.
But like this post from Charlie Kirk that said,
shut up about the price of eggs.
And then, you know, said like Donald Trump saving you money
in so many other ways.
But just, I mean, again, this is the most sort of tiresome pundit observation.
But imagine if Joe Biden had posted shut up about the price of eggs
at a time when egg prices were increasing, you know, I think as rapidly as they did in his administration.
Yeah, we're just, we're hearing more and more from CEOs privately, you know, that they're not investing in their firms.
They're playing it safe. It's not just the markets, but the sense of this like chaotic tariff policy and where it's going to take people.
We know that Trump pays attention to numbers. He's obsessed with his poll numbers and he's obsessed with markets.
But again, what we're talking about before, that desire to break America down.
But that's Trump's idea of power. If I can destroy, if I can defile and march on,
relatively unscathed and unpunished, well, that makes me powerful. Other people can't get away
with that. And that's how dominant. That's how superior I am. But Michelle made a really,
really, really important reference a moment ago to the information environment. And what I think is so
fascinating to watch right now and potentially deeply troubling. You know, the markets are not doing
well. The price of eggs is not coming down and on and on. And there is a widespread belief that,
okay, that'll be his reckoning. Americans are going to see that and they're going to say,
no, we need to change, just like we felt we needed a change from Joe Biden. But with such a
corrupted information environment and with such a committed demagogue in the White House,
can Trump succeed in weaving a different narrative, selling a different narrative, a different narrative,
pointing other people to blame, shifting the blame, is he going to us
usher us into something that looks like a post-accountability era?
Frank, I think the answer is yes.
He does sort of defy in so many ways what would be a kind of a normal holding to account of a leader in power.
I just never underestimate Donald Trump.
It's a rule of thumb of mine.
Never underestimate the man.
And part of that is because there are so.
many Americans who just want leadership.
And right now, they look at the Democratic Party.
They looked at Joe Biden and Kamala Harris.
They didn't see what they felt they needed to see to meet the moment politically.
I mean, what do you want to see from Democrats right now?
What does leadership look like in this moment that would be effective in countering Trump,
in holding him accountable?
I can give you one very short, easy answer. I want to see Alyssa Slotkin's response to Trump's remarks to Congress.
They were brief. They were to the point. They did not indulge in the sort of hysteria that characterizes his approach to everything. So they provided a contrast. And this is key, I think. There's an ongoing intense argument in the Democratic Party. Do we match his tactics with those sorts of tactics of our own? You know, do we fight fire with even more fire? And I think the way you get a change, the way you win elections, is to provide a contrast. And most of those responses to
state of the union or to this almost state of the union, non-state of the union, most of those have
been pretty lame and disappointing. And I thought the way in which Alyssa Slotkin's response
kind of boiled it down to three fundamental American concerns, talked about those in language
that was plain and that had not a trace of can't in it, and simply said, here is what is not being
done correctly, and we care as much about those issues, but we'd approach them in a much more
effective and commonsensical way. I think she gave us the answer for how to respond to Trump.
And I think maybe we're doing too much hand-wringing and not looking at the obvious.
I, so, I mean, look, I think her response was very good. And Alyssa Slotkin is very impressive.
But I also think that there has to be a measure of kind of leadership and authenticity that
comes from responding to where people actually are. Now, you have. You have.
you know, millions and millions of people who are so horrified or so aghast by what's happening.
I mean, I talk to them all the time and they feel like they have no leadership.
They feel like nobody is articulating what they're feeling and they feel like nobody is doing
anything about it and telling them where we go from here.
Those people, they need and deserve leadership as much as people who are voting based on
on the price of eggs. And it's just not there. We don't really have an opposition party.
Michelle, I want to read you a letter that we got last week after our episode with David Brooks,
where David and I were talking about Trump's address to Congress, Alyssa Slotkin's response,
but also pieces like the James Carville op-ed that we had about sort of Democrats needing to wade it out.
I heard from a lawyer in Ithaca who wrote this.
Democrats should wait it out?
You guys apparently have no idea how angry and upset we regular citizen Democrats are at the lack of action by our elected officials.
We are beside ourselves out here.
We are watching what's happening and seeing no one in Congress doing anything significant to stop it.
And she went on and just, I think, conveyed what you were going to.
getting at Michelle, just that sense of wanting someone to lead, having someone take some kind of
action or at least lay at a plan of like, folks, this is how we're going to meet the moment and we're
going to get through the moment. Can anyone leader meet it, Michelle? Do you think it's that possible,
like one person, like a Bernie or an AOC? Look, it's probably not going to just be one person,
but at the same time, there is this sort of political mantle just out there that just as a matter of
political entrepreneurship, you would think more people would be trying to grab.
Frank, any thoughts on our letter writer from Ithaca?
Listen, I feel the letter writer's pain in terms of agreeing that this country is in a dire place
and it's scary as hell and the appetite for some sort of action that would take us out of this
as fast as possible. I share that appetite. I think Democrats don't have a lot of cards to play right now,
and I would just kind of throw that into the mix. You know, one of the things, you know, one of
things that Democrats aren't doing. It's not the kind of thing that you get to explain in a rousing
fashion on a podium with a microphone in front of you. But Democrats are fighting in courts,
and some of the most hopeful things that we've seen happen are courts saying, wait a second,
too fast, let's put the brakes on this. Maybe we can't let this happen. But Democrats do not
have a majority in Congress, right? They don't have a lot of levers to pull here. And I think
a lot of the frustration gets translated into where is our inspiring, charismatic, spectacularly
articulate leader, when really what's wrong is that there aren't a lot of cards to play.
Michelle, Frank, thanks so much for joining me.
Thank you.
Thank you.
If you like this show, follow it on Spotify, Apple, or wherever you get your podcasts.
This show is produced by Derek Arthur, Sophia Alvarez Boyd, Feshaka, Fiby
Juliet, Christina Samuelski, and Jillian Weinberger.
It's edited by Kari Pitkin, Alison Bruzek, and Annie Rose Strasser.
Engineering, mixing, and original music by Isaac Jones, Sonia Herrero, Pat McCusker, Carol Saburo, and Afim Shapiro.
Additional music by Amin Sahota.
The fact check team is Kate Sinclair, Mary Marge Locker, and Michelle Harris.
Audience Strategy by Shannon Busta, Christina Samuelski, and Adrian Rivera.
The executive producer of Times Opinion Audio is Annie Rose Dresser.
