What A Day - President Trump Is Disconnected From His Beloved Base
Episode Date: December 3, 2025President Trump is old, and it shows. But in his second term in the White House, he's not just old – he's cloistered. After building his political career on massive rallies, he's spent significantly... more time this year on international travel and hanging out with billionaires, and significantly less time with the Americans who actually voted for him. Could that be why he's spent way more energy focused on getting America psyched up for a war with Venezuela and building a new ballroom than pretty much anything his base supported him for? To find out, we spoke to Jonathan Lemire, staff writer at The Atlantic and co-host of Morning Joe on MSNOW, about his piece called "The Bubble-Wrapped President."And in headlines, the president holds another perfectly normal cabinet meeting, more immigration judges get pink slips, and the Trump administration threatens to cut off SNAP payments in most Democratic-led states next week… unless those states turn over detailed personal records on aid recipients.Show Notes: Check out Jonathan's piece – https://tinyurl.com/59ef33stCall Congress – 202-224-3121Subscribe to the What A Day Newsletter – https://tinyurl.com/3kk4nyz8What A Day – YouTube – https://www.youtube.com/@whatadaypodcastFollow us on Instagram – https://www.instagram.com/crookedmedia/For a transcript of this episode, please visit crooked.com/whataday Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
It's Wednesday, December 3rd.
I'm Jane Koston, and this is what a day, the show thanking President Donald Trump for recognizing National Green Bean Casserol Day?
And I just want to wish everybody a great holiday week.
He said this on Tuesday.
On today's show, fetch the White House kneepads.
It's time for another grovel fest, or Trump, cabinet meeting.
And eight immigration judges in New York get fired for what I'm sure will turn out to be perfectly legitimate reasons.
But let's start with Donald Trump.
As I just mentioned, President Trump held a cabinet meeting on Tuesday.
And when he wasn't screaming about the evils of Somali immigrants or ranting about how Fox News business is fake news, he was falling asleep.
Or as my grandmother would say, the president of the United States was,
resting his eyes during a cabinet meeting, a move I usually reserve for televised golf.
Trump is old, and it shows.
But in his second term in the White House, he's not just old, he's cloistered.
After building his political career on massive rallies,
he spent significantly more time this year on international travel and hanging out with billionaires
and significantly less time with the Americans who actually voted for him.
Could that be why he spent way more energy focused on getting America psyched up for a war with Venezuela,
and building a new ballroom than pretty much anything his base supported him for?
That's the case Jonathan Lemire made in the Atlantic this week,
in a piece entitled The Bubble Wrapped President.
He's a staff writer there and co-host of Morning Joe on MS Now.
I spoke to Jonathan about what Trump's growing isolation might mean for the midterms,
the GOP, and the country.
Jonathan, welcome to what today.
I'm happy to be here.
So it feels to me like Donald Trump is endemic,
and I can't get rid of him, and he is everywhere all the time.
But that's clearly not as true in some ways as it used to be.
When did you first hear whispers that people close to the president felt like he might
be too isolated or out of touch?
He's still, believe me, a dominant figure when it comes to our political and media landscape.
But in terms of his physical location, he's on the road far less than he used to be.
So I've been hearing for some time over the summer is when I was told that he was
going to go travel again. He's going to start campaigning in support of the one big beautiful
bill, the Republican legislation that he signed into law on July 4th. And that didn't come to pass.
And I was sort of curious as to why. And basically what we found, my colleagues and I at the Atlantic
found, is that, you know, compared to the first year of his first term in 2017, when he was on the
road quite a bit and continued even having rallies very early on for his reelection bid, this time,
barely at all. He's done some foreign travel, yes, but he hasn't really gone across the United
States. And in fact, in October, November, the only trips he made outside of Washington
or to his own clubs down to Mara Lago. And people around him, advisors and Republicans,
are saying because he hasn't been out there, that's part of the reason why he's lost his
feel for what his voters really care about. And they fear it's leaving him out of touch.
Now, being the president of the United States is an inherently isolating job. I still remember when
Barack Obama was president, and he took a walk across the mall. And it was like an event and there
was secret service everywhere. And I lived in D.C. at the time. And it was like, people were texting me.
Like, the president is out on a walk. How uncommon is Trump's more limited schedule?
You are absolutely right. Every president lives in something of a bubble. That's just due to the
inherent nature of the White House. And as you say, the extreme security measures that come with the job.
And certainly there are some Democrats who felt that President Biden, Trump's predecessor, by the end of his term, also was at least something of a political bubble where bad news, bad polls, like weren't reaching him.
But this is new where Trump is right now, because it's not just the lack of travel.
It's a couple other factors, too.
First of all, this time around, unlike in his first term, he is surrounded simply by yes, men and women.
That's by design.
He didn't want people in the building telling him no.
He got tired of that the first time around.
He's always been, of course, in a real conservative MAGA news silo.
But in this term, he's not even on Twitter, where occasionally he'd be exposed to contrary views.
Now, he's on Truth Social, a social media app he owns, and everyone there agrees with him.
And he just seems to be focusing on things like the White House ballroom, let's say,
as opposed to what polls suggest, Americans actually want him to focus on, like, say, lowering prices.
This sounds a little bit like there's this old Russian saying, if only the little father knew, that if only the czar knew what was going on, he would change everything.
And this sounds kind of like if the president knew what his constituents wanted or were saying, he'd be making different choices.
But it doesn't really feel like Trump is very concerned with what anyone else wants.
Like he wanted to blow up the east wing.
He wants to maybe go to war with Venezuela.
How much is this reflective of a change in terms?
Trump and how much of this is reflective of just who Trump is?
My sense of it is a little bit of both because, again, in his first term, and in those four years
out of power, he always did seem concerned with what his base wants.
He would do like wild about faces on policy positions because he wanted to make sure he kept
his base happen.
A good example.
At the end of his first term, he certainly downplayed the severity of the COVID pandemic quite
a bit.
But at the same time, he and his administration pushed forward Operation Warp Speed,
and got the vaccine through in record time.
And there was a moment where Trump was pretty proud of that.
And in fact, he did a speaking tour in 2021.
He held a couple of events where he bragged about the vaccines.
But what happened?
He got booed.
He got booed by his crowd, which at that point had been conditioned to thinking that COVID pandemic was mostly a hoax.
So what did Trump do?
He no longer talked about the vaccine.
So there have been moments where he's been responsive to the will of the people, if you will,
or at least his supporters.
But you're also right to say that particularly this term,
he seems far less interested in that.
One of the big things the president is not doing is hitting the campaign trail for other
party members.
At best, he's showing up in virtual rallies to support Republican candidates or literally
showing up on someone's cell phone.
And something we've seen in each midterm during which he's been president is that if he's
not on the ballot, his voters don't turn out.
But if he shows up at rallies, he can basically say, like, I pick this person.
This is who should run.
what does that mean for down-ballot Republican candidates to not have him there?
And does that mean that they're starting to think of life beyond him?
So I think it's a good question because, again, much like he was allegedly going to do some
barnstorming over the summer for the legislation, there were tentative plans for him to hit
the campaign trail at least a little bit this fall for, you know, in Virginia, New Jersey.
That also didn't come to pass, nor to the special election in Tennessee, where I appearance there
might have guaranteed a lopsided Republican win. Republicans are, you know, generic ballot tests
losing significantly to Democrats right now. But they still feel like Trump's presence on the trail
would help. I'm told, and I reported for the piece, that there are plans to get him out on the road
again next year for the midterms. We'll see if he follows through. He did aggressively campaign back
in 2018. Didn't help. Republicans still lost a lot of that. But they think him being out there would at least
give them a better chance to get their voters to the polls.
Instead, outside of the usual trips to his golf clubs or Mar-a-Lago, he's mainly been traveling
to see his rich friends in New York or making trips abroad. Why do you think he's turned
his focus overseas? It's a couple things. First of all, you're right to highlight just the
company he's keeping right now, where it is wealthy business people, it is, you know,
tech leaders, people who have a lot of money and also want things from him. I've been told he really
like enjoys having that sway in power over people, you know, who are fabulously wealthy because
that is by many measure how Trump gauges, whether he respects someone or not, might be the size
of their bank account. As for the foreign policy stuff, it's two parts. Now, first of all,
this is something that's not unusual for a second term president. Their ability to get
things done domestically shrinks, particularly as midterms approach and people start looking
towards the next presidential election. Presidents have a lot more leeway. They have a lot more
unilateral power when it comes to foreign policy. So that, in that case, Trump is not so different
than others that have come before him. But as I think you know, he is obsessed with the idea of a
Nobel Peace Prize. He believes he's been wrongly not given one to this point. And that's been his
focus as well, really on overseas matters, whether it's the Middle East or Russia, Ukraine, or any of the
other six, seven, eight, depending on the day, conflicts he claims he has solved. I'm curious, what does
it mean for the Republican Party if the president, who is currently so disconnected from his
own voters, can't reconnect with his voters where they're at?
There have been so few moments where Republicans, in either Trump term, have been really willing
to defy him. And certainly the first seven or eight months of this term, he had lockstep
complete loyalty other than like Thomas Massey and Rand Paul. That's changing. We have seen
Republicans, even some of the true Maga believers defy him on different.
Jeffrey Epstein. We have seen the Senate refused to consider throwing out the filibuster.
We right now have bipartisan questions about the boat strike in Venezuela, the so-called
double-tap that the administration and Secretary of Defense Hegeseth is under a lot of scrutiny
for. These are starting to add up where Republicans are saying, well, look, Donald Trump
has been the dominant figure in our party, and frankly all of our entire politics for the last
decade, but particularly when next midterms arrive, and that's now 11 months away, he officially
will be a lame duck. Now, we don't know how Trump's going to respond to that. There's still
open questions as to whether or not he'll willingly leave power, but for Republicans, they
have to start thinking about what a post-Trump future will look like. Jonathan, thank you so
much for joining me. My pleasure. Happy to do it again. That was my conversation with Jonathan
Lemire, staff writer at The Atlantic and co-host of Morning Joe on MS Now. We've linked to his
piece in the show notes. We'll get to more of the news in the moment, but if you like the show,
make sure to subscribe, leave a five-star review on Apple Podcasts, watch us on YouTube, and share
with your friends. More to come after some ads.
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by mentioning us at Checkout. Charms and conditions apply. Here's what else we're following
today. Headlines. Sir, you made it through hurricane season without a hurricane.
Yeah. And so Fiedmont, you even, you kept the hurricanes away.
You appreciate it.
Homeland Security Secretary, Christy Knoem, thanked Trump for keeping hurricanes away
during yet another one of his perfectly normal cabinet meetings on Tuesday,
where everyone went around the table showering him with praise.
In a CYA mission during the meeting, Trump and Secretary of Defense Pete Hegsef
deflected blame for the decision to kill the survivors of a military strike
on an alleged drug smuggling boat in the Caribbean this September.
A decision everyone denied ever happened, like,
10 seconds ago.
Though we also had this to say about those responsible for bringing drugs to the U.S.
And hundreds of thousands of people a year died, and we're taking those son of a bitches out.
Words you never thought you'd hear from the president of the United States in a cabinet meeting, or publicly, ever.
The Trump administration fired eight immigration judges in New York on Monday.
More than a hundred of the roughly 700 total immigration judges in the country have been,
fired or pushed out since the start of Trump's second term, despite the fact that there is a
backlog of almost four million cases in immigration court. Also on Monday, former immigration judge
Tanya Niemer from Ohio filed a lawsuit against the administration. Nemer was part of a wave of
firings in February. Her suit claims that she was discriminated against based on her sex,
national origin, and political affiliation. Neymar is a woman, a dual citizen of the U.S. in Lebanon,
and at one point in her career, unsuccessfully ran for office as a Democrat.
At the same time as immigration judges are being fired on mass,
the Department of Homeland Security is recruiting something they're calling, quote, deportation judges.
DHS secretary, Trisha McLaughlin, posted on social media last week that the jobs can be fully remote,
with a salary of as much as $207,000.
I would hope your soul could go for a little more cash, honestly.
Michigan Democratic Senator Alyssa Slotkin posted on Monday some of the threats her office has received since President Trump called for several Democratic lawmakers to be put to death for treason on true social.
And just a warning that what you're about to hear is pretty graphic.
I can eat popcorn while I watch you get executed for treason.
God, I'm going to pray for that.
Yeah, TikTok.
I hope you get fucking murdered.
I want to see you murdered on TV.
What I do pray is you died today.
along with everybody and your family.
Somehow, those are some of the least violent calls in the video.
This is all happening because back in November,
Senator Slotkin and five other Democrats,
who have all served in the military and intelligence communities,
posted a video reminding current service members
that they have a responsibility to disobey illegal orders.
No big deal, right?
It's a literally part of the oath they've already taken.
But for Trump, it was a big deal.
On true social, he called the video,
quote, seditious behavior,
punishable by death and shared a post calling for the lawmakers to be hanged.
Another senator, Mark Kelly from Arizona, is now being investigated by the Pentagon for, quote,
serious allegations of misconduct.
The White House and congressional Republicans have since walked Trump's statements back,
but Trump has left the posts up because, of course, he has.
21 states, including California, New York, and Minnesota, the blue states,
continue to say no.
So as of next week, we have begun and will begin to stop moving federal funds into those states until they comply.
On Tuesday, Agriculture Secretary Brooke Rollins announced the Trump administration's intent to, once again, Politica says, the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, or SNAP.
The administration is now threatening to cut off SNAP payments in most Democratic-led states starting next week, unless those states turn over detailed personal records on aid recipients.
Specifically, names and immigration status.
According to Rollins, the data is needed to root out fraud.
The administration first requested the information in February.
So far, Republican-led states have complied with the data request
while Democratic ones are battling it out in court.
To put it lightly, Snap has faced unusual political pressure this year.
Like the expanded work requirements to participate in Snap
tucked inside Trump's big Republican spending law debacle disaster adventure.
And then there was the longest government shutdown
ever that delayed some SNAP payments last month as Trump held the program hostage.
It's almost as if Trump doesn't care about SNAP and its recipients at all.
Might be strange for a president who cares so much about affordability.
Affordability is a hoax that was started by Democrats who caused the problem of pricing.
Is that so? And that's the news.
One more thing.
As I've mentioned before, FBI director, Cash Patel doesn't want to be FBI director.
He wants to watch hockey and mixed martial arts fights and his girlfriend's country music concerts.
He does not want to fight crime or something.
On Monday, Connecticut Democratic Senator Chris Murphy told CNN pretty much what I've been saying for months.
Well, we've probably never seen an FBI director care so little about his job as Cash Patel.
He does seem to be spending most of his time gallivanting around the country, visiting his girlfriend, going on golf trips with his buddies, getting as close to the MAGA celebrity world as is humanly possible.
and he's racking up all these huge bills on us, the taxpayers, right?
These are ordinary average Americans, plumbers, teachers, pipe fitters who are paying the bills for his celebrity lifestyle.
Senator Murphy was discussing an investigation by House Democrats into Patel's use of a private plane owned by the FBI for private use,
namely to watch his girlfriend sing at a concert at Penn State University.
And then there's Patel's use of an FBI SWAT unit to protect that same girlfriend.
But a new report prepared for the Senate and House Judiciary Committees by active duty and retired FBI agents shows all of that is the least of Patel's problems.
As detailed by the New York Post, the report states that Patel, quote, has neither the breadth of experience nor the bearing an FBI director needs to be successful, adding that his ego and thin skin have left the agency, quote, internally paralyzed by fear.
Take, for example, the time that Patel flew to Utah the day after Charlie Kirk's murder, but refused to leave the plane because he didn't have an FBI raid jacket.
According to the report, FBI special agents working to solve Kirk's shooting had you stop what they were doing to find an FBI raid jacket that would fit Patel, and allegedly borrowed one from a female agent.
Then he got mad because it didn't have Velcro patches on the arms.
So members of an FBI SWAT team took the patches off their own jackets and gave them to Patel, who then,
finally left the plane. Not my words, this is what the report says. It also says Patel ordered
polygraphs to find internal critics, and the report also notes that FBI deputy director Dan
Bongino is viewed as, quote, something of a clown by the people working for him. Many of the
people quoted in the report make sure to point out that they are loyal Trump supporters, but Patel
and Bongino have pushed them to their limit. So maybe it would be best if Cash Patel
focused on what he loves most.
watching hockey, and MMA fights and his girlfriend's country music concerts.
Not running the FBI.
Before we go, check out the new episode of Potsave the World that just dropped today.
This week, Tommy and Ben break down the election in Honduras,
Trump pardoning the ex-president there, and the fallout from the National Guard shooting.
Plus, they chat with filmmaker Julia Laktev, and Russian journalist
Kassania Miranova about their new documentary, My Undesirable Friends, Part 1, Last Air in Moscow,
which follows independent Russian journalists as they face government crackdowns.
Listen to Pod Save the World wherever you get your podcasts or watch on YouTube.
That's all for today.
If you like the show, make sure you subscribe, leave a review.
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I'm Jane Koston, and according to Hanover County Animal Protection and Shelter, the raccoon had a few hours of sleep and then, quote,
It was safely released back to the wild,
hopefully having learned that breaking and entering is not the answer.
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