The President's Daily Brief - PDB Afternoon Bulletin | September 1st, 2025: Trump’s Gaza “Riviera” Plan Leaked & Anti-Immigrant Protests Spread Across England
Episode Date: September 1, 2025In this episode of The PDB Afternoon Bulletin: A leaked Trump administration plan for post-war Gaza envisions a U.S.-run trusteeship, population relocation, and a transformation of the enclave in...to a “Riviera of the Middle East.” Across England, a wave of anti-immigrant protests is spreading as hotels housing asylum seekers become flashpoints for local anger. To listen to the show ad-free, become a premium member of The President’s Daily Brief by visiting PDBPremium.com.Please remember to subscribe if you enjoyed this episode of The President's Daily Brief.YouTube: youtube.com/@presidentsdailybrief TriTails Premium Beef: Don’t Settle for shrink-wrapped "steak" Visit https://trybeef.com/PDB to get the real stuff.Jacked Up Fitness: Get the all-new Shake Weight by Jacked Up Fitness at https://JackedUpShakeWeight.com Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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known in some countries as Labor Day.
Welcome to the BDB afternoon bulletin.
I'm Mike Baker.
Your eyes and ears on the world stage.
All right.
Let's get briefed.
First up, President Trump's vision for post-war Gaza
has been leaked to the Washington Post.
And with a nod to Trump's business experience,
it reads more like a real estate brochure
than a plan to rebuild a war zone.
I'll have the details.
Later in the show, a wave of anti-immigrant
protests is spreading across England. From Epping to Bristol, hotels housing asylum seekers have
become flashpoints, and local anger is boiling over. Of course, when you've spent years extolling
the virtues of an open border and not asking newcomers to bother assimilating into your country and
culture, this sort of result could have been anticipated eventually. But first, today's afternoon
spotlight. We'll start today with a story out of Washington that sounds like something
between foreign policy and a business prospectus.
The Washington Post has obtained a 38-page document circulating within the Trump administration
that lays out a sweeping vision for Gaza after the war.
Now, it's called the Gaza Reconstitution, Economic Acceleration and Transformation Trust.
And if you turn that into an acronym, which I'm sure you're about to, it would be great.
So in classic Trump branding style, this plan is the great,
trust. The plan is modeled on the president's earlier vowed, who, quote, take over Gaza. Under the
terms, the U.S. would run the territory under a trustee ship for at least 10 years, I don't see how that
could go bad, overseeing its reconstruction and governance. The plan calls for 6 to 8 AI, which I'm
told means artificial intelligence, powered smart cities, gleaming beach resorts, high-tech manufacturing
hubs, even electric vehicle plants, and data centers. The pitch is that Gaza,
would no longer be rubble and refugee camps, but a glistening enclave of commerce and tourism,
the so-called Riviera of the Middle East. Seriously, I'm not making this up. Now, to make that
happen, the plan calls for something extremely unlikely. That would be the relocation of Gaza's
entire population of more than two million people. The proposal describes this as, quote,
voluntary. Gossans could take cash and move abroad, or they could be placed in what the document
calls, quote, secure zones inside the strip, essentially restricted camps where they'd wait
while reconstruction goes forward. Now, each person who agrees to leave would receive a $5,000
cash payment, plus subsidies for four years of rent and one year of food. Those who own land
would be given a digital token, essentially a certificate of ownership issued by the trust. You can just
imagine the meetings where these people cook this one up. That token could be used to finance a new
life elsewhere or eventually redeemed for an apartment in one of the new smart cities once they're built.
And here's a telling detail. The plan estimates that every Palestinian who departs, who leaves,
saves the trust $23,000, compared to the cost of keeping that person in a secure zone. In other words,
the trust says that relocation is cheaper. Financially, the blueprint claims the Great Trust would require
no U.S. taxpayer funding. Instead, it would be backed by public and private investors, with
mega projects generating self-sustaining revenue streams. The math goes like this. Invest $100 billion
now, and in 10 years, the return is projected at nearly four times that, around $400 billion.
So why do I feel like I'm listening to a timeshare sales pitch? The origins of the plan are as
interesting as the plan itself. It was developed in part by some of the Israelis who set up the
Gaza Humanitarian Foundation, the group currently distributing food inside the strip with the help of
armed U.S. contractors. Financial modeling, oh, they did do some financial modeling, apparently,
came from a team at the Boston Consulting Group, though two of the senior partners in
have been fired since coming up with their financial modeling. So were they fired for terrible
financial modeling, or were they fired for simply participating in this bizarre exercise?
Last week, President Trump held a meeting on Gaza's future that,
included Secretary of State Marco Rubio, Special Envoy Steve Whitkoff,
former British Prime Minister Tony Blair, and Jared Kushner,
the President's son-in-law, who still has major business interests in the region.
For now, the White House isn't confirming whether the Great Trust is the official plan.
Coming up next, unrest across England as anti-immigrant protests grow louder.
I'll be right back.
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Welcome back to the BDB afternoon bulletin. The UK is seeing a growing wave of anti-migrant
protests outside hotels currently being used to house asylum seekers.
Over the past few weeks, scenes have turned increasingly tense in places like Epping, Bristol, and London.
The flashpoint right now is the Bell Hotel in Epping, northeast of London.
A high court judge has ordered that asylum seekers must be moved out after weeks of protest,
some of them turning violent.
The case began when a man staying at the hotel was accused of sexually assaulting a teenage girl
charges that he denies.
Local officials argued the hotel violated planning rules and was inflaming community tensions.
The court cited with the council, setting a deadline of mid-September to move people out.
That ruling could become a model for councils across England to try to shut up.
down asylum hotels in their own districts. Already, conservative leaders are encouraging local
authorities to mount legal challenges if they think they can win. Even some labor councils
are weighing the idea. In Bristol last weekend, protesters gathered under the banner of, quote,
abolish asylum system facing off against counter demonstrators from, quote, stand up to racism.
Mounted police had to separate the groups as scuffles broke out, leading to more than a dozen arrests.
In London and other cities, similar standoffs have taken place, sometimes with hundreds involved.
These clashes are a symptom, frankly, of a system under strain.
Britain is legally obliged to house asylum seekers while their applications are processed. For years,
that meant private rental housing. But during the pandemic, hotels became the default.
At the same time, channel crossings surged. Last year alone, more than 45,000 people arrived in small boats.
The backlog of asylum cases swelled, and at one point more than 50,000 migrants were being housed in hotels.
The government has since cut that number to about 32,000 spread across more than 200 hotels.
But the anger hasn't subsided.
Local residents say they're struggling with housing shortages and rising costs while watching hotels in their own towns converted to migrant housing.
In some places, recent criminal cases involving asylum seekers have hardened those frustrations.
The government of Prime Minister Kier-Starmer has promised to end the use of hotels altogether by
29.
Officials say they're speeding up asylum processing, pursuing deportations, and working with France
to stop the channel crossings.
They're also exploring alternatives like former military bases and private rentals.
But with the rivals this year running higher than last year's pace, the problem is far from
solved.
The politics of all this, well, the politics are combustible.
Nigel Farage's Reform UK Party has made asylum hotels a centerpiece of its campaign rhetoric.
Some conservative lawmakers have backed him up, pointing to Epping as proof that local communities
can fight back. Labor dismisses that as opportunism, but the ruling party is also under pressure
from its own councils and from voters who want immediate change.
Authorities are deeply worried about the risk of unrest. Just last summer, riots spread across
English towns after false rumors linked a stabbing suspect to migrants. Mobbs surrounded hotels and
violence broke out in multiple cities. Police say they've sharpened their response since then,
but the potential for a repeat, of course, remains. Similar protests have taken place in Scotland
in towns like Falkirk and Aberdeen, but the sharpest flashpoints and the legal battles now unfolding
are in England. Here's the reality. The government must house asylum seekers. Hotels are a short-term
fix that communities no longer accept. Finding alternatives is politically toxic and letting migrants
fend for themselves would break the law. That leaves the government scrambling to process cases
faster and shrink the backlog, but until that happens, the hotels will remain the fallback
and a flashpoint. And you can understand, on one hand, why people are upset. Communities feel
blindsided. Decisions about where to house asylum seekers are made in London, but its local residents who
live with the consequences. They see hotels in their neighborhoods taken over, social services stretched,
and sometimes serious crimes tied to migrants making headlines. Most protesters are not extremists,
despite how they're often portrayed, their parents and families who feel ignored, and they want their
government to listen. The current rising tensions are the result of years of participation in the
European Union's open borders policies and an immigration and asylum process that has been ineffective
and slow. Layer on top of that, the UK's practice of what is sometimes called multiculturalism,
meaning immigrants have been told for decades to celebrate their own culture and not to focus on
assimilation or integrating into British culture. That combination, over several decades,
open borders, large-scale asylum-seeking, and multiculturalism, is a recipe for a divided
and restless population. And that, my friends, is the PDB afternoon bulletin for Monday.
the 1st of September.
Now, if you have any questions or comments,
please reach out to me at PDB at thefirstTV.com.
And of course, if you'd like to listen to the show ad-free,
well, you can do that and do it very simply.
Just become a premium member of the president's daily brief
by visiting PDB premium.com.
I'm Mike Baker, and I'll be back tomorrow.
Until then, stay informed.
Stay safe. Stay cool.
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