What A Day - Trump: Here We Go Again
Episode Date: January 21, 2025Donald Trump is President of the United States. Again. His inaugural address Tuesday wasn’t quite as dark as the ‘American carnage’ speech he gave eight years ago. This time around, Trump promis...ed the beginning of a “golden age of America” before reading off a laundry list of policies he plans to pursue during his presidency that will, almost certainly, not usher in a golden age. Standing behind Trump were some of the richest men in the world: Tech CEOs Sundar Pichai of Google, Meta’s Mark Zuckerberg, Amazon’s Jeff Bezos, and X’s Elon Musk. Longtime D.C. reporter and friend of the pod Todd Zwillich helps us break down Trump’s inauguration speech. Later in the show, Eugene Daniels, White House correspondent for Politico, walks us through the many executive orders Trump signed Tuesday.And in headlines: Joe Biden spent his final hours as president issuing a bunch of preemptive pardons for members of his family and Trump’s political enemies, Vivek Ramaswamy may leave DOGE, and China said it’s open to selling TikTok.Show Notes:Check out Eugene's work – politico.com/staff/eugene-danielsSupport victims of the fire – votesaveamerica.com/reliefSubscribe 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
Transcript
Discussion (0)
It's Tuesday, January 21st.
I'm Jane Coaston and this is What a Day, the show that's very interested in obtaining
Melania Trump's inauguration hat.
It appears to create a powerful force field that keeps Donald Trump at arm's length.
Where can I get one?
On today's show, President Biden says peace out, but not before signing a bunch of preemptive pardons for Trump's political enemies.
And Vivek Ramaswamy flames out at Doge to maybe run for governor of Ohio.
Oh right, and we have a new president, who's also an old president, both in the literal meaning
of the word old and in the way that this is, unfortunately, not the country's first rodeo
with this guy.
The golden age of America begins right now.
From this day forward, our country will flourish and be respected again all over the world.
He doesn't sound very excited about it.
Donald Trump delivered his inaugural address at the Capitol Rotunda, and it was sworn in
as the 47th President of the United States.
At 78, he is the oldest man to be sworn in as President in U.S. history.
His inauguration speech wasn't quite the American carnage of his first address eight years ago, but he did spend a lot of time talking about how everything sucked before
Monday because previous administrations had run the country into the ground, you know,
minus the four years he was running the country.
My recent election is a mandate to completely and totally reverse very horrible betrayal, and all of these many betrayals that have taken place,
and to give the people back their faith,
their wealth, their democracy, and indeed, their freedom.
From this moment on, America's decline is over.
That's right.
As Trump would have us all believe,
everything magically changed at noon Eastern time and
sunlight poured over the entire world or something.
And now he'll get to work fixing all the country's problems, except there are no more problems
because he's president again.
So to talk more about President Donald Trump's second inauguration and what it says about
his plans for a second term, I called up longtime Washington reporter and friend of the pod,
Todd Zwilich.
Todd, welcome back to What A Day.
Always a pleasure.
So Trump has made a ton of promises, like free IVF or ending the Ukraine war before
even taking office, which he already hasn't done.
There's no way he can keep them all, and I don't think he really plans to.
But we've also talked on this show about how deliverism,
the concept of delivering on your campaign promises
for your base to keep them happy,
maybe matters less than vibes now.
Making your base feel like you're delivering for them
without actually having to do anything.
What do you think?
I think these things inevitably are gonna clash.
There are a bunch of things that Donald Trump
will be able to deliver on.
Look, he is delivering on closing the border,
ending asylum, remain in Mexico,
naming drug cartels as terrorist organizations,
all those things he is delivering.
There were a bunch of other promises
it's gonna be really hard to deliver on.
Things like tax-free overtime, no taxes on tips.
That stuff costs hundreds of billions of dollars, and he's got a Congress that is going to deliver
on tax cuts for corporations and for the wealthy.
They're going to run up the deficit while they do it because they're also going to increase
defense spending.
So another couple hundred, I don't know how many hundred billion dollars, I'm not sure,
to do some deliverism on those things.
There are a lot of casual low information or just sort of low engagement voters who
probably said, tax-free tips?
Amazing.
I make tips.
Tax-free overtime?
That's great.
I get overtime.
Delivering on that, it's possible.
They can make choices to do it.
It's gonna be really hard.
And if and when they don't do it, Donald Trump is not the one
who's gonna pay the price.
Let's talk about the wealthy.
Trump also made sure that the world's richest tech oligarchs
like Amazon's Jeff Bezos, Google's Sunder Pichai,
Metta's Mark Zuckerberg, and of course,
his new best friend forever, Elon Musk,
were prominently
seated next to Trump's own family.
They were even sitting in front of Trump's own cabinet picks, and Republican governors
got shunted off to some overflow room, and it made for a wild split-screen moment when
Trump said this.
As we gather today, our government confronts a crisis of trust.
For many years, a radical and corrupt establishment has extracted power and wealth from our citizens
while the pillars of our society lay broken and seemingly in complete disrepair.
First and foremost, it's always striking to me how Trump sounds so low energy when someone
else wrote the speech, like he could not be more bored.
It is not possible for a person to be more bored.
But also a lot of Americans think these very men, Elon Musk, Mark Zuckerberg, are the ones
who are extracting power and wealth from citizens and are also directly responsible for the
crisis of trust Trump mentions.
But their front and center president says a lot about who is going to have the president's
ear in a second term.
And it's not the working class.
The tacit message I got from that split screen
or that combination screen, as you just described it,
is who's going to have the public's ear,
or who at least Donald Trump thinks
is going to have the public's ear.
What do I mean?
Who did Trump place in that shot?
We all know Donald Trump designs a shot.
Whoever's in the shot is who he wants in the shot. All of the tech oligarchs, including Mark Zuckerberg that you described. He's lying
in that statement in a very complex and nuanced way, the one that you played. And I think
the message is we now control what the public, especially the lower information public,
will glean from that irony or from that disconnect.
We control the message.
We have increasing control over the algorithm.
The CEO of TikTok America was also behind Trump.
He wasn't quite in the shot, but he was there.
And he was seated next to Tulsi Gabbard.
Right next to Tulsi Gabbard,
the hopeful for Donald Trump,
director of national intelligence.
Imagine that.
So the irony, even though it's not very cool irony that I took away from that is,
yes, these two things are completely disconnected.
Yes, I can blame an up sucking of money from a corrupt establishment
on my enemies and literally have the richest people
in the world sitting behind me.
And you can think that's weird if you want to,
but you may never in fact learn about it.
And it was notable to me that former White House
chief strategist, Steve Bannon, Goldman Sachs his own
and sort of the architect of the MAGA movement, he wasn't
even there.
But while leading by press release and social media may work for Trump, his model of politics
has a risk for his party.
First, Trump can't run again, and so far no one's been able to successfully replicate
his style of politics.
And secondly, congressional Republicans will need to deliver some wins while they have
majorities in both chambers, while those majorities are so thin
and they all hate each other.
What do you think?
I think that Donald Trump won't have to worry
about any of these things.
As you mentioned, I think that the promise
of a Donald Trump without the insanity,
Donald Trump without the rank bigotry
and Donald Trump without the circus-like atmosphere
was supposed to be Ron DeSantis. So it's, they haven't found that guy yet. How much will
the deliverers impart of that matter if they don't deliver on so many of the things that
you mentioned at the top? Will Donald Trump's public abandon him? The base of the Republican
party won't, but Donald Trump got over the top when the popular vote by something shy of
two million because lots and lots of people, a lot of people who voted for Joe Biden in the past
and may have voted for Barack Obama, gave Trump a shot because of grocery prices or high prices or
even immigration. So it's not all base next time. I don't know where this goes in four years. I'm
worried about the information environment. I'm worried about the converts and propagandists sitting behind Donald Trump
during that speech. But I also know that that's not the whole country, not the whole country
is enveloped in these algorithms, not the whole country is quite as online as you and
I and Elon Musk, to put us all in the same boat for a second.
Sorry, Jane.
But what that means is there are millions of voters
out there who, if they don't get tax-free tips,
if they don't get, I was promised tax-free overtime,
I was promised great things on day one,
you might lose people.
Now you might lose them to attrition to not voting at all.
And if Democrats get smart,
you might lose them to Democrats.
Who knows?
Midterms are in two years
and the Republican house majority is two votes.
Todd, thank you so much for being here.
Always a pleasure, Jane.
That was my conversation with longtime Washington reporter
and friend of the pod, Todd Zwilich.
reporter and friend of the pod, Todd Zwilich. After Trump's speech, he headed to the inauguration parade at Capital One Arena.
Is there anything sadder than an inside parade?
I'll wait.
That's also where Trump signed the executive orders he previewed in his inaugural address,
spanning everything from an immigration crackdown and expanding oil drilling to ending diversity programs and
Renaming the Gulf of Mexico the Gulf of America and those he didn't like pardons for the January 6th
Insurrectionists he did talk about those later during his inside parade and you know tonight
I'm gonna be signing on
the J6 hostages
pardons to get them out.
And as soon as I leave, I'm going to the Oval Office and we'll be signing pardons
for a lot of people, a lot of people.
To walk us through the executive orders Trump signed on Monday and the ones he's
promised to sign, I spoke with Eugene Daniels.
He's a White House correspondent for Politico. Eugene, welcome to What A Day. Thanks for having me. What a day, truly.
What a day, indeed. So a lot of people have been bracing themselves for executive orders
Trump said he'd signed to crack down on immigration. What orders did he actually put pen to paper
on on Monday?
So with immigration, tasking the military with border enforcement was one of them.
Designating cartels and gangs as terrorist groups was another.
He declared a national emergency at the southern border, ordered the Department of Defense
to be more heavily involved tasking officials from there to deploy additional troops to the border.
He shut down asylum and refugee admissions.
And that's just like,
just of some in the immigration category, right?
He rolled back 78 Biden era executive actions,
1500 pardons for January 6 rioters,
left the Paris Climate Accords, left the WTO,
and is trying to figure out a way to get rid of birthright citizenship.
Let's get into that for a second, because I know it sounds like a really basic question,
but what can an executive order do or not do?
The Constitution is very clear on the issue of birthright citizenship.
It's come up with the Supreme Court a couple of times.
So what does an executive order stating that birthright citizenship is over for children
of undocumented immigrants actually do?
Yeah, that's the thing about executive orders.
A lot of them are just signals, right?
So now he can say that he worked to get rid of birthright citizenship.
And so everyone that is a MAGA fan,
someone who is already predisposed
to believing everything that he says,
is kind of going to assume
that he got rid of birthright citizenship.
It is obviously, as you said, not that easy.
It is in the Constitution.
The thing that is really interesting
about the way that Donald Trump and his team
think about this, that's the opposite
of how most presidents have thought about it in the past,
is that he is willing to call people's bluff, right?
He's willing to call the bluff of the Supreme Court
to say, I dare you to take down this executive order that I signed.
I dare you to do so.
Other presidents wouldn't do something like that
because they would say it's settled lots and it's in the Constitution.
That's not something that he seems to care about at all.
I was talking to someone over the weekend who's been in touch
with DOJ, now DOJ officials under the Trump administration.
And they said that they're going to be pushing the limits, going
to be at the edge of, of all of the things.
And these EOs are a perfect example of how they're trying to do that.
What else did he sign that stood out to you? I know we've talked about a couple of different things.
What did you see that was particularly interesting?
Yeah, I mean, the pardons were really interesting. We knew that those were coming.
It's a long list, right, commuting some of the sentences of some of the folks who have already been sentenced.
I also think the kind of talking about there are
two genders, right? That's something that is a cultural war fight that the Trump folks
have been trying to go back and forth with. I was in the rotunda on Monday when he talked
about that in his inaugural address. And so he is clearly signaling over and over to the
people that voted for him, the things that I talked about and that I promised to you guys, I'm going to try and
do that.
And it changes a lot of the way a lot of a small part of the population operates, right?
We know that trans and non-binary folk aren't this humongous population in the country,
right?
They make up a small subset of queer folks, right?
But it stays in the minds of a lot of people and it gives them kind of queer folks, right? But it stays in the minds of a lot of people
and it gives them kind of an enemy, right?
It gives them someone to be upset at.
This is one of those things that Donald Trump
is very good at is giving his spokesman
someone to be angry with.
We're gonna take a quick break,
but we'll have more of my conversation
with political White House correspondent,
Eugene Daniels, after some ads.
If you like the show, make sure to subscribe,
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Let's get back to my conversation with Eugene Daniels, White House correspondent for Politico.
One of the things though, I remember from the first Trump administration,
was the chaos of executive orders, or tweets for that matter,
that were basically left to a bunch of other people to figure out how to put into place.
Somebody else is going to have to figure out how to ask the Supreme Court,
please, can you change the Constitution?
Or, like, somebody else is going to have to do that.
Is this all happening again?
Are we just doing 2017 bizarro weirdness again
2017 probably some of the things again
I will say this is more organized than it was before right these aren't just tweets or
Exes or whatever yeah social post truth socials that that he's sending out that these this
Trunche is has been kind of well thought out for the Trump people, well discussed at the very least.
Even as they were being announced,
there's someone that's standing next to him
as he's signing and saying which ones he's signing.
And Trump knew exactly which ones they were.
The guy just kind of says one sentence
and Trump could go into more of it.
So it's a little bit more organized.
But yeah, other people are gonna have to figure this out.
The lawyers within the administration are gonna have to figure this out, right? The lawyers within the administration
are gonna have to fight this.
As soon as lawsuits happen, which 3-2-1 probably already,
you are going to see the Trump administration
have to defend a lot of these things.
Birthright citizenship, I would assume,
being kind of at the top of that list.
And like the Supreme Court can't change the Constitution, right?
There's a... We have a process. If we all go back to, you know, the, you know, at the top of that list. And like the Supreme Court can't change the constitution, right?
We have a process.
If we all go back to, you know,
I'm just a bill on Capitol Hill days when we were kids,
but the process doesn't matter to Trump
on some of these things.
It is signaling to his folks
that he's doing the things that he promised.
And then if it doesn't end up happening at the end,
he tried. Eugene, on what a't end up happening at the end, he tried.
Eugene, on what a day indeed, thanks for being here.
Thank you so much.
And what a day tomorrow will be, and the next day,
and the next day.
What a day.
That was my conversation with Eugene Daniels,
White House correspondent for Politico.
Here's what else we're following today. Headlines.
I'm not going to discuss it now.
I think it was unfortunate that he did that.
We won't discuss it now.
There's plenty of time to discuss it.
Yeah, plenty of time.
Like the next four years, unfortunately.
President Joe Biden took advantage of his executive power in the final moments of his
presidency, and preemptively pardoned former Chair of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Mark Milley,
former public health official Dr. Anthony Fauci, and members of the House special committee
that investigated the January 6th insurrection, including former Representative Liz Cheney.
Trump has threatened to go after his political opponents and those trying to
hold him accountable for his efforts to overturn the 2020 election.
In the past, he's called Cheney a quote, deranged person.
And during an event in Arizona, Trump also said, quote, she's a radical war
hawk, let's put her with a rifle standing there with nine barrels shooting at her.
That is a real quote from the man who is now our president.
In a statement on Twitter,
Biden defended the pardon saying,
"'These public servants have served our nation
with honor and distinction and do not deserve
to be the targets of unjustified
and politically motivated prosecutions.'"
Trump mentioned the move in his rambling
post-inauguration speech.
-"Why are we trying to help a guy like Milley?
Why are we doing Milley? He was pardoned. What he said. Terrible what he said.
Why are we helping some of the people? Why are we helping Liz Cheney? I mean,
Liz Cheney is a disaster. She's a crying lunatic.
Biden also pardoned several members of his family in a final batch of clemency decisions.
The White House announced those pardons 20 minutes before Trump took his oath of office.
Biden said they were made out of fear
his family would be prosecuted unfairly
by the new administration.
Biden said, quote,
Unfortunately, I have no reason to believe
these attacks will end.
Yet, then he welcomed Trump back to the White House.
That's some wild cognitive dissonance.
The nomination of the great Senator Marco Rubio Some wild cognitive dissonance.
Trump's minions in the Senate are working quickly to advance his cabinet picks.
Marco Rubio was confirmed as Secretary of State Monday in a unanimous vote.
His nomination was the first to be approved after Trump's inauguration.
Senate committees voted to advance four other Trump picks on Monday.
The Senate Intelligence Committee advanced John Ratcliffe's nomination to lead the
CIA.
The panel voted 14-3 in favor of Ratcliffe.
All three no votes were cast by Democrats.
And Pete Hegseth's Defense Secretary nomination was approved to go to the Senate floor.
Every Republican on the committee voted in Hegseth's favor while every Democrat voted
against him.
I wonder why. Nominations for Kristi Noem, Trump's pick to lead the Department of Homeland Security,
and Russell Vogt, the nominee for White House Budget Director, were also advanced.
Vivek Ramaswamy is reportedly planning on leaving the Department of Government Efficiency,
or DOGE for short.
President Trump tapped Ramaswamy to lead the new department with tech billionaire Elon Musk last reportedly planning on leaving the Department of Government Efficiency, or DOJ for short.
President Trump tapped Ramaswamy to leave the new department with tech billionaire Elon
Musk last year.
Musk and Ramaswamy had big plans for how to cut federal spending, even though the department
isn't a real government entity.
Ramaswamy is reportedly piecing out because he's gearing up to launch a gubernatorial
bid in his home state of Ohio next week.
But Politico reported that DOJ, Musk in particular, wanted Ramoswamy gone.
Tensions between the two were already high ahead of inauguration day.
Ramoswamy and Musk's Twitter beef about H-1B visas last year was a big point of contention.
And as a native Ohioan, I can tell you, no one flees DC for the warm embrace of Columbus
unless they have to.
Musk will now lead Doge solo, and he's got his work cut out for him because his department
was sued just minutes after Trump was sworn in.
I'm not kidding.
At least three federal lawsuits were filed against Doge on Monday.
China said on Monday that it's open to selling TikTok, which would allow the social media
company to keep its US market of more than 170 million users.
TikTok is already back online after it went dark over the weekend.
But Congress's ban on the app, which requires TikTok to cut ties with its Chinese parent
company ByteDance, is still on the books.
The Chinese government initially said it would not allow ByteDance to sell TikTok to a foreign
buyer.
Monday's reversal is good news for folks like tech billionaire Frank McCourt, who have shown interest in buying the platform. Trump signed
an executive order on Monday granting ByteDance a 90-day extension to sell. And that's the news.
Before we go, Trump is back in the White House after Monday's inauguration,
and the chaos isn't letting up.
On the latest episode of Inside 2025, Dan and Alyssa take a deep dive into how inaugurations
come together, the scandals from the past, and their favorite moments from previous ceremonies.
Get access to this exclusive subscriber series and more by joining Friends of the Pod.
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