Everyone wants to know if AI is conscious, but consciousness is really hard t...
It's the experience we're having right now.
“What it is like to eat chocolate or to look at the blue sky?”
So how do we know who or what is conscious? Check out the new way scientists are finding to measure the elusive phenomenon on shortwave. Listen on the MPR app or wherever you get your podcasts. This is Fresh Air, I'm Dave Davies. If you follow news about Donald Trump, you'll find there's plenty of it all the time.
And you get used to impulsive decisions, surprising developments, and sudden changes of course. Terrific rise and fall with dizzying speed. The Iranian leaders he was calling rational days ago, he now regards his scum.
The pattern is so familiar that when I learned that New York Times reporters Maggie Haberman and Jonathan Swann had written a new book about Trump's second term in office,
“I wondered, is there really anything new to report here?”
It turns out there's plenty. Swann and Haberman conducted a thousand interviews for the book, and the result is an account which adds rich and fascinating detail to developments that were generally known, and explores stories that had somehow slipped under the radar. There are gripping accounts of top officials meeting to deal with the Epstein files and whether to follow Israel into war with Iran. And stories of rolling bullsessions in the YOLVAL office, one with the conservative influencer coming in to demand the firing of officials she regards as disloyal.
But the book paints a big picture too. One of an unrestrained Donald Trump remaking the American government and its international relations in profound ways. The book is titled regime change inside the imperial presidency of Donald Trump. Our guest today is co-author Jonathan Swann, who's worked closely with Maggie Haberman covering the White House. Swann is originally from Sydney, Australia.
He came to the US in 2014 and previously reported for the Hill and Axios. He won an Emmy Award for his 2020 interview with Trump during the pandemic, which went viral and got millions of views. We recorded our interview yesterday. Oh, Jonathan Swann, welcome back to fresh air. Thanks so much for having me. One of the stories that is told here is how important policy decisions are made in this White House. And there's an example I want to talk about. February 2025, when BB Nethon Yahu is at the White House.
This is when the war in Gaza was underway. The hostages were still being held and Trump surprised the world with this new proposal. The US will take over the Gaza script and we will do a job with it too. We'll own it and be responsible for dismantling all of the dangerous unexploded bombs and other weapons on the site. Level the site and get rid of the destroyed buildings, level it out, create an economic development that will supply Unlimited numbers of jobs and housing for the people of the area. Trump went on to saying that news conference that this could be the Riviera of the Middle East and that everybody he'd talk to loved the idea.
What did your reporting reveal about the development of this proposal in the White House and the kind of vetting it got?
Well, a proposal of this magnitude, which would have entailed the displacement and removal of 2 million Palestinians, sort of unimaginable scale of
essentially ethnic cleansing, you would think it would have gone through some kind of a process, you know, pentagon assessments, what do we need in terms of American troops on the ground, State Department, what are the diplomatic arrangements that we would need to put in place intelligence assessments about what what the landmines might be that we might need to circumvent. None of those things happened. This was an idea that Trump had raised in a sort of muzing kind of way during his presidential daily briefs a couple of times. He would see
aerial photographs of Gaza and he would hear about the destruction there and he would muze about, well, it's great waterfront land, maybe we could do something with this. But none of the staff had thought that this was anything more than him just muzing. So he meets with Netanyahu and then shortly before that press conference, he's meeting behind the scenes with some of his aids and he says, "What do you think about this idea?"
And his natural security adviser at the time, Mike Walses there and he, as a veteran understands the military component of what something like this would entail and he said,
“he may clear the president that you need to make clear that we're not going to put American boots on the ground,”
and then there's this sort of pause and Trump turns to his communications director, Stephen
Chang Lee says, "What do you think?
"It's a strong move, sir." So, you know, this was about as unfettered a proposal, as you could imagine. But the way it was presented, it was like people thought this was a fully formed idea, and we talked to senior people in the government who are watching this presentation, and they were just a gas. Right. And of course, Trump wasn't saying this is a maybe, if I'm the president, we're going to do this. Of course, it's gone nowhere.
This probably would not have gone the same way in the first term, right? It was a different White House then.
Very much so. I mean, this term is unrecognizable from term one, and I still think a lot of people view Trump through the land, or at least his administration in government through the lands of the first term. It just couldn't be more different. One of the ways in which it's different is the team around him.
“I remember in term one, covering Trump, and you would have so many conversations with senior officials,”
including senior national security officials, and the overwhelming impression that you would receive from talking to these people was, they thought they were working for someone who was dangerous, and they saw their own roles as protecting the country and the world from the person that they were
ostensibly working for. Those type of people don't exist anymore in this administration. They really don't.
Not in any meaningful way to senior level. I'm sure they exist. I know they exist at a more mid-level, but at a senior level, it's really a group of people who believe in him, a loyal to him. In some cases, went through the campaign with him. Many of them were radicalised on the campaign through the investigations and the efforts to prosecute Donald Trump. Many of them received some pizza penis themselves and viewed the stakes of the 2024 election as not so much about policy,
but about staying out of prison. So that's the mindset of Trump and his inner circle, and it's created a situation where there's very little friction between a Donald Trump idea that might have just left straight from his internal monologue out of his mouth with no filter to an effort to make it actual American policy and execution. It didn't happen in this instance with the Gaza thing, but it's happened in many,
many other instances, including starting a trade war with the whole world. You know, it's well known that Trump and his public statements what we might call a loose relationship with verifiable facts. And when you combine that with a situation in which there's really no one who will confront him
“with uncomfortable truths, you end up with policy that can be divorced from reality, right?”
Yeah, I think it's slightly more nuanced than that in the sense that there are people at different moments in this government who have confronted him with uncomfortable truths. We have a section that's a couple of areas, but particularly on Iran where the Vice President Jady Vance quite aggressively argues against this war and actually costs him with Trump. But you're correct that in the main, that's absolutely dynamic. It's a group of people who not
along a firm Donald Trump when he's not hearing what he wants to hear, he goes elsewhere to get affirmation. So we have a scene in the book. It's kind of an astonishing scene where this is just before he launches the trade war with the whole world, last April, Liberation Day, and he's in the Oval Office with his core economic team and Howard Lucknick, the Commerce Secretary, is discussing tariff rates with him from China and India. And the data that he's presenting Trump is from the
government, it's from the US government, USTR, it's the official data. And Trump turns to Natalie Harp,
who's a young assistant and she sits in the, basically against the wall of the Oval Office.
You can see her in some of the photographs, but he says Natalie Google me the real numbers. These are real numbers. Get me the real numbers. And of course, so then she starts furiously Googling to try to find whatever these real numbers are. And of course, you can't find the real numbers because they don't exist. But that's very representative of the way he seeks out information when he's hearing something that doesn't comport with his instincts. He goes to other people
to get validation. I want to talk about another memorable anecdote in the book. And this was a case
“where some expertise was consulted in her crucial decision. This was February of this year when”
BB Netanyahu comes to the White House, goes to the situation room, which is a rare for a foreign
Leader and makes the case for going to war with Iran.
close to a nuclear weapon. We can't afford to wait. There are proxy allies in the region have been
weakened. It's right for a regime change. Let's get this done. And you write that administration intelligence operatives. Work that question overnight to evaluate whether this is a good idea. What do they say? What does Trump say?
“So extraordinary moment, you know, in the history of this whole war is written. I think this is one”
of the seminal moments. It was February 11 this year. The Prime Minister of Israel comes down to the White House situation room. You said rare, I'm not sure a presentation like this has ever happened. It's possible it has. We couldn't find a parallel for it.
Well, the foreign leader being in that room. Being in that room and pitching the United States
present on a war, which is essentially what was not essentially that is what happened. He came down to the situation room, Trump leaves his usual place at the head of the table and sits in the middle of the table opposite Netanyahu and Netanyahu who gives this presentation. He's got, you know, he's got the screen on the wall behind him. And he has the head of Mossad
“and Israeli generals on the screen. And Netanyahu played a video for the president of regime change”
scenarios and essentially a montage of potential replacements for the Iatola. So the presentation ends and Trump was quite impressed by it. And he said something to the effect of sounds good. His team was much more skeptical. So overnight, the CIA analyzes Netanyahu's presentation to figure out how plausible were these scenarios that he was laying out. So the next day, there's a meeting in the White House situation room and two agency officials,
brief Trump's senior team, Trump's not in the room yet. And they lay out the findings.
The bottom line is they say that these regime change scenarios were divorced from reality.
Now, some of the other things that Netanyahu was talking about, you know, like degrading Iran's ballistic missile capacity, the agency thought were plausible. But the regime change scenarios, they thought were divorced from reality. So then Trump comes in and the CIA director, John Ratcliffe, described the CIA's findings to the president. And he said that Netanyahu's regime change scenarios were direct, quote, "physical." And then Rubio, the Secretary of State National
Security Advisor, used even stronger language to describe them. So Trump was briefed, but Trump had a gut feel. Just a strong gut instinct that this would be a fast war that Iran would fold quickly. And that these scenarios that were being discussed, like a closure of the straightforward moves and America running low on weapons, none of this would come to bear because the war would be over before any of that would happen. So it's complicated. You know, there are
a lot of people who read our reporting and said, "Ah, see, I knew it." You know, Netanyahu was, you know, the puppet master who tricked Trump into the war. And that very simple narrative ignores the fact that Donald Trump himself has long been quite hawkish on Iran and much more hawkish than everyone on his team. Netanyahu certainly made a compelling presentation, but the skepticism and the risks were briefed to Trump and he chose to ignore them. I want to talk more about this
belief that overthrowing that regime was some part of his destiny. But you had to cut off your reporting at some point for the book. And as things have unfolded, it was not a short war and it's been a terrible -- well, it's unfolded in a way that's been very harmful to Trump politically, that's, you know, it's raised gas prices. He can't seem to get out of the, you know, the situation he's gotten the country into. Have you gotten any reporting about whether he
regrets this where he sees himself as having committed a blunder? Trump's not someone who would admit that necessarily in a direct way certainly wouldn't blame himself for it. But it's pretty clear that is what he thinks. It's pretty clear he realizes that this war has not gone well, has not played out the way that Netanyahu pitched him or that Trump himself thought would play out. And he's trying to get out of it. I've covered Trump for quite a long time. This is my 11th year of covering him.
“I can't remember a time. Maybe COVID. But aside from COVID, I can't remember a time where Trump”
looked as stuck as he looks right now. Just doesn't seem to know how to get out of this war.
Is caught between bad options.
And I think to some extent, every American president over estimates their own power to affect
“events. But I think we saw a very extreme version of that with this war. When Maggie and I sat down”
with the president about two weeks into the war, he was boasting about the Venezuela operation, where they seized Maduro. And he described it as a one-hour war. And it was just so clear that he had developed this admiration for the American military, which is understandable. They pulled off this delta force. I mean, there's nothing the American military does better than this special operator, led raids. But Iran was so different. And he was told that and yet he still felt that
he knew better. Well, the other way said, I understand war better than the general, as I understand. Right. Disease better than the scientists. Right. You know, the subtitle of this book is inside the imperial presidency of Donald Trump. It seems clear that he wants to be seen as a great
“leader in history. How much does that explain these aggressive foreign policy moves? I think it explains”
it to a very large extent. In the first term, he took some risks internationally. No question.
I mean, they seem so quaint now. But I remember he was warned. Don't move the US embassy in Israel to Jerusalem, you know, that would be a disaster. And the Middle East would be up in flames. And then he did it. And the diasynorists didn't play out. He was warned against withdrawing from the Paris climate accord. He did it. And in his view, it was just fine. He was warned against pulling out of Obama's nuclear deal. And he did it. And it was just fine. In his view, he killed Kasim Solamani,
the top Iranian general. Some people thought that was about idea. And it would cause absolute chaos and in his view, it didn't play out that way. So in one sense, the story of moral hazard, you take big risks and there aren't consequences. And that just keeps building. It's actually kind of the story of through line of Donald Trump's life. But his mindset in the second term is so different from the first term. In the first term, he was very reactive to domestic politics.
This time around, it's not that he doesn't care at all about those things that he certainly does, but he cares far less. And this was sort of brought home to us very starkly when when we sat down with the president in March. And Maggie and I asked him about his power. And he handed us two sheets of paper, which he said was written by a historian. And it said, "Don't
Trump is the most powerful man who's ever existed." And he said, and it compares him to what
Trump described to us as the top 10. And it was figures like Mao, Stalin, Adolf Hitler, Alexander the Great, William the Conqueror, a tiller the harm, Ganges Khan, the Caesar's, you know, you get the idea. And nothing to do with morality, all just about pure power projection. And Trump was relishing being in that company. He was sitting back in his chair and he was reading out the names Napoleon. Isn't this interesting? You know, they build a power by fear.
And Maggie and I talked about it afterwards and it really occurred to us that when you look at it
“through that lens, his second term makes a lot more sense. Why is he willing to take these huge risks?”
Why is he willing to send America back into a Middle Eastern war? Why is he willing to send Delta Force into Caracas to snatch a foreign leader, Maduro out of his bedroom? Well, if your goal is to be a capital G, great man of history, then it's worth taking the risk of, you know, potential disaster, but then potentially you're the first American president in 47 years to finally deal with the Islamic Republic, this this maligned regime in Iran. And so you start to see
the puzzle kind of fit together. And possibly expand the territorial area of the United States to include Greenland Canada. That's absolutely a big part of his mindset. He really does want to, you know,
there's all this sort of talk of always he trolling when he says Venezuela is a 51st state.
No, he means that quite literally one of my colleagues had a story about how he's running Venezuela from Washington. That's how they view it. They view this new leader Delcy Rodriguez as essentially
A governor of an American oil field.
So let me reintroduce you. We are speaking with Jonathan Swan. He's a White House correspondent
“for the New York Times. He is the author with fellow White House correspondent, Maggie Haberman”
of the New Book regime change inside the imperial presidency of Donald Trump. He'll be back to talk more after this short break. I'm Dave Davies, and this is fresh air. This season of Planet Money Summer School, we go to China, one of the world's biggest economy. And what we learned is Americans are crazy. Chinese are crazy. These are two countries full of these crazy hustlers. The US and China are more alike than you might think. On Planet Money
Summer School a strange lesson about success. How to handle the downsides of progress. Listen on the NPR app or wherever you get your podcast. The last phase of the World Cup is underway and the NPR network has been there since the
“first whistle. Okay bird is a small African island nation that's priced everyone by making it to”
the world. Not only did something no man or woman have done before. He scored goals in six different world cups for a tool. As we enter the final matches of the tournament, head to the NPR app for all things World Cup from the NPR network. This is fresh air. I'm Dave Davies, and our guest is New York Times White House correspondent Jonathan Swan. He's the author with fellow Times White House correspondent Maggie Haberman of a new
book about Donald Trump's second term in office. The book offers rich new detail on major stories that were covered over the past year and a half. And it makes the case that Trump, now free from constraints he worked under in his first term, is dramatically reshaping the
“American government and its relations with the rest of the world. The book is regime change”
inside the imperial presidency of Donald Trump. We recorded our interview yesterday. You know, one of the points you make in the book is that Trump has far less interest in domestic
political issues than he did in the first term. And there are some pretty critical ones. I mean,
the midterm presenter real threat to his administration if the Republicans lose control of the House, but he's not traveling that much and helping candidates. And you have an interesting anecdote about this. When a government shutdown was looming over the Democrats' insistence in restoring cuts to the American, the Affordable Care Act. And in this case, the deadline is near, and so Trump hosts a meeting at the White House. He gets Chuck Schumer, the Democratic
leader of the Senate, Mike Johnson, the Speaker of the House, who came Jeffries there, what role does he play in this meeting? Well, he's basically in sort of provocateur trolling mode.
It's the first time and so far, the only time in this administration where he's in the room with
all four leaders, the Democratic leaders in the House and said it and the Republican leaders. And the conversation is, as most conversations with Trump go, not linear, it's not really focused on what would actually be required to get a compromise or a deal. Instead, he's throwing things out there like, why don't we just, you know, get better health care? Why don't we just come up with a whole new health care system? And so, you know, the Republicans sort of have
to gently steer him around that. And then there's this moment, partway through the meeting, where Trump gets one of his aides to bring out, there's a room off the oval, which Trump has essentially turned into a sort of gift shop or sort of merchandise type shop where you've got mega caps and all kinds of other trinkets. And the aides brings back these caps that say Trump 2028, which is Trump's, you know, troll, but you know, there's this sort of easy trolling isn't he,
you know, about running for an unconstitutional third term. And he puts the caps on the table
so that the photographer, the White House photographer, can photograph Chuck Schumer and Hakim Jeffries, the two Democratic leaders with a Trump 2028 hat in the foreground. And this sort of awkward exchange in shoes where Hakim Jeffries asks Vice President Vance who is there. Are you okay with this, you know, obviously given he's the successor and he said this is no comment. So that was the, that was the vibe, but it was just, the meeting ended up achieving nothing. Trump seemed to be
Focused on creating a spectacle, embarrassing the Democrats, wielding power, ...
but nothing came of it. And of course, then the government shut down.
Well, the details he were just fascinating at one point. He said, "Hey, let's all have some cook." So he has it brings out soda and then brings out what he calls the poison, which is candy. And then he closes his eyes for a while and then asks Vance to kind of take over, presiding over the meeting, right? Yep. Just not really serious about getting a deal. When, of course, it went on for weeks after that, right? That's exactly right. And you know,
one thing we tried to do with the book is not just tackle the way he issues like around,
“but actually give people a real intimate sense of what life is like inside the White House.”
And you know, we have a lot of stuff about his private life inside the residents and the way
meetings tend to work. And this is, that was going to ask you about the phrase you use is rolling bullsessions. Yeah. I mean, anyone who uses the word meeting might think that a meeting has a beginning and an end and is sort of locked up, you know, in a calendar, you might say the meeting begins at 10 30 and ends at 10 45. These are the people that will attend. Here's the agenda. You know, in previous presidencies, it's even more rigid than that. You know, George W. Bush used
to schedule himself in 10 or 15 minute increments. A farmer too. That is not how it works with Trump. Meetings have no beginning, middle or end. There's almost no delineation. And what often ends up happening is it's essentially one meeting that just rolls throughout the afternoon with different people joining
“and leaving and Trump, you know, engaged or not engaged. People who have no business being in”
the meeting sometimes joining, whether it's a pro wrestler or a crypto investor or foreign, you know, somebody from a golf monarchy or a CEO. And so all of this is happening. The conversations are non-linear. You know, Trump will get fascinated about one thing that has nothing to do with the topic and that can derail a meeting. We have a scene in the book where he's having a conversation very small meeting, which is highly classified about a defense program. And this guy comes in,
just walks in to the overall, you know, sort of the earth, kind of country-looking guy, and he's holding stone samples for the Rose Garden, because Trump was planning to pave over the Rose Garden. And he just comes in and Trump gets up from his cease and that the two go off and sort of start conferring, looking out the window, talking about the paving and the stone, and this and that gets on the phone with another contractor. And before you know it, times up, you know, the meeting
is ended, they haven't actually resolved the issue, they were going to resolve. So that's the dynamic, but again, like most things with Trump, it's not so simple. Because if I just told you that, you would think, okay, well, this thing is loose and chaotic and leaky and everyone knows everything. It's actually the opposite. When there are issues that Trump really cares about or his team wants to keep secret, they can be incredibly secretive to the point of great frustration across the government.
And when it comes to the waciest issues, like the planning of going to war with Iran, we found that very, very senior people in the government were a completely cut out of the loop and B had no idea about the conversations about what was being discussed in the Oval Office. The upside from that level of secrecy is no leaks. The downside is,
“Trump has not given access to the expertise that he needs to make big decisions. And I think this”
is a very stock example of that. Yeah, we need to take another break here. We are speaking with Jonathan Swan. He is a White House correspondent for the New York Times and the author with fellow White House correspondent Maggie Haberman of the New Book regime change inside the imperial presidency of Donald Trump. We'll talk more in just a moment. This is fresh air.
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“On NPR's Wildcard podcast, writer Terry Tempest Williams on what it means to be a woman with a”
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but we're always being asked if we are. Watch or listen to that wildcard conversation on the
NPR app or on YouTube at NPR Wildcard. This is fresh air and we're listening to my interview with Jonathan Swan, a White House correspondent for The New York Times. He's the author with fellow Times correspondent Maggie Haberman of the New Book regime change inside the Imperial Presidency of Donald Trump. You refer to the Imperial Presidency in the title of the book, and part of that is Trump's expansionist foreign policy, flexing America because power
throughout the world. There's a domestic side to this too. He's also expanded executive power by firing the members of independent government agencies and the Supreme Court has essentially supported that. He's also engaged the justice department in these campaigns of retribution, which he's open about. There are some very public examples that are well known. James Kome, Latisha James, the Attorney General of New York, it gives us a sense of how people are targeted.
“And he's another thing that's really important when it comes to the retribution campaign,”
and that's that for Donald Trump, the process is the punishment. His former deputy attorney general now, now attorney general Todd Blanche, had real doubts about the validity and the strength of the evidence that the DOJ had against Latisha James. This is the Attorney General of New York who had had brought a case against Trump, a ledding business ride, right? Yes, exactly. And Trump, she was right at the top of Trump's enemy's list, and he wanted her prosecuted. And Trump told an
advisor, "I don't really care if we get a conviction. I just want to make her life miserable." And so, Trump understands, because partly because he went through it himself, that the process of being investigated by the federal government is itself a punishment. And he is directing his justice department to put his enemies through that punishment regardless of the facts. How would you say that campaign is going for Donald Trump? Because, you know, a lot of the efforts
to charges adversaries have been thwarted. It's been publicly reported that this didn't work that the evidence wasn't there. And we now have the spectacle of the Justice Department charging the former Olympic athlete David Hurn, a felony destruction of property for touching the peeling paint at the bottom of the reflecting pool. I mean, this can't be good for Donald Trump, can it? Well, one of the reasons why he, maybe the, the main reason why he got rid of
Pam Bondi, his first attorney general was because he was dissatisfied with the pace of prosecutions
and the effectiveness of this campaign to imprison his political opponents and enemies. That being said, what I just said before about the process being the punishment, he is also happy just to see all these people have to go through the pain. You know, being investigated by the government is expensive. It can ruin your employment. It can put your family through all kinds of stress. And so all of these people in Trump's
crosshairs, whether it be James Komi, Jack Smith, Littisha James, John Bolton, good-down the list, their lives have all been turned upside down to different degrees. And most of them don't publicise it. But many of them have to pay for their own private security. They live under threats. Their lives have, have changed. And Trump is very happy about that. One of the other things you notice is President Trump's focus on decorating the White House.
“This was kind of interesting. What's all that about?”
When Trump returned to the White House, the resident staff had made everything
basically the same way it was when he left in the first term. When Trump got back though,
he immediately concluded that there was room to have more gold there. He said publicly and privately that he would have liked to have done more with the White House in the first term, but was hard because he was under siege from investigators and so forth. This time we write in the book, you know, he really could unleash his inner
Louis XIV.
of modesty when it comes to design and decoration, reflecting the fact that
“America is a republic, not a monarchy. Trump has no use for that history and in fact,”
I traveled with President Trump to the Middle East, you know, palace after palace. And it was really instructive to watch him with these Middle Eastern rulers. He was just in a state of absolute pleasure, you know, going from one palace to the next, admiring the marble, looking at the most rarefied displays of state wealth on earth. And that's essentially what he's trying to create at the White House. You know, he's gilded almost every corner
of the overlaps. Like you walk in, it's like the inside of a jury box. It just glows with gold, all around you. He's building this grand ballroom. We have in the book that he seemed to almost be competing with Melania as to who had had the better bedroom. They have separate bedrooms,
“and he was taking objects that she had placed in the center hall of the residents and putting them”
in his bedroom. You know, he's long had a taste for gold, but this time around he's just put his own
stamp on the White House in a way that he didn't do in the first time. We're speaking with Jonathan
Swan. He is a White House correspondent for the New York Times and the author with fellow White House correspondent Maggie Haberman of the New Book regime change inside the Imperial Presidency of Donald Trump. We'll be back after this break. This is Fresh Air. On this season of Planet Money Summer School, we follow the money, and not just the dollars, we're following the Yuan, the Naira, the Krona, and more. Everyone's day this summer,
we're taking you on a world tour to meet the people trying new solutions to old economic problems. Planet Money Summer School, perhaps some friends, pack your bags, and don't forget the sunscreen. Listen on the NTRF or wherever you get your podcasts. Okay, so you're driving to work, or you're on a walk, or you're at the gym or whatever, and you just need to clear your head. That's the perfect time to hit the play button on NPR's
all songs considered. It's not the news, it's not work, or whatever else is weighing you down. It's just a good time with good friends and great tunes. Listen to all songs considered every Tuesday in the NPR Music podcast. This is Fresh Air, and we're listening to my interview with Jonathan Swan, a White House correspondent for The New York Times. He's the author with fellow Times, White House correspondent Maggie Haberman of the New Book, regime change, inside the
Imperial Presidency of Donald Trump. You grew up in Sydney, Australia, right? Your dad was a journalist. You went into the business to newspaper stories exposing official corruption and self-dealing, and then came to the US in 2014, right? Your later got a job at the Hill, which is the publication that follows. Congress went on to report for Axios, and eventually the Times. When you were at Axios, you did an interview with Trump in 2020, early in the COVID crisis, which went viral.
Juan Uanemi, the millions of views, and the internet, and it became inspired memes. Let's just listen
to a little piece of that conversation. We've done 55, it'll be close to 60 million tests, and
you know, there are those that say, you can test too much. You do know that. Who says that? Oh, just read the manuals, read the books. Read the books. Read the books. What books? What testing does it shows cases? It shows where there may be cases. And that's Donald Trump speaking to our guest, Jonathan Swan. You know, Trump is such, he's a difficult interview, because he's such a salesman, a talker. He kind of bum rushes the interviewer, right? He interrupts he deflects questions,
takes the conversation where he wants to go. And what we hear there is you are cutting in very quickly and just saying, wait, wait, wait. What? Was this something that you consciously prepared
to do in that interview? I mean, I know it wasn't the first time you'd spoken to him.
“Yeah, an interview with Trump requires an enormous amount of preparation, if you want to hope”
to come out of it with any level of success. He's a really difficult interview for all the reasons you described. He's an overwhelming presence, and you are confronted with a sort of title wave of words. Many of the words and the sentences are detached from reality or completely false, and you
Have to make judgments in real time about what you let go.
can pick your moments. But I saw my role as the representative of the people in that chair.
“You're the one who's lucky enough to be sitting in that chair, interviewing the president of”
United States. What would, what would regular people want to know and what we should do in that situation? And I think that when you're interviewing a president of the United States, you want to find the balance between letting them explain themselves and not cutting in every two seconds, but finding moments that are really important to puncture the bubble. Trump creates
an unreality bubble. It's the way he operates. It's very powerful. Tucker Carlson actually described
it publicly as like being under a spell, and I would certainly wouldn't ascribe a supernatural dimension to it. But I know what he's getting at. Trump will say, we have won the war in Iran. They're begging us. They're on their knees, calling her stuff that's just manifestly false.
“And you have to sort of make a decision if you're one of his advisors. Do I just not along with it?”
Or do I push back and whatever? And at some point you just have to let it wash over you. Your job in an interview is to puncture that unreality bubble. But you can't do it every sentence. So it's more of an art than a science. And what I try to do in that interview is hold him accountable but also let him explain himself at the same time. You know, you and Maggie Haberman have made quite a team. Journalists are notoriously individualistic. I worked at a daily paper for 20 years
and collaborated with other journalists at time. And that's tricky because journalism is filled with judgments, you know, to be made about who did trust, what value to assigned to information, whether you share sources and information with your partner. Can you just share a bit about how you connected and formed this partnership? So I admired Maggie as a reporter when I
competed against her. She would just break stories almost every day about Trump during the first time.
Just a completely relentless well-sourced reporter. And we were friends, even though we were competitors. When I joined the New York Times in January of 2023 and I got to actually work with her, I was more impressed. Often when you see someone up close, it's kind of disappointing. You know, you've admired them from far then you take a close look and you sort of think, okay, this kind of person's kind of a fraud. It was the exact opposite. I was much more impressed once I had
worked close with her. And I understood how vast her sourcing networks are, how relentless she is as a reporter. And we just very quickly formed a very natural reporting partnership, very complimentary. We're in a rhythm now where it's hard to even articulate. It's like we almost share a brain. And one of the reasons the book was really hard was because you are making hundreds and thousands of those judgment calls. You know, it's not like one person can just, you know, laterally say, well,
this is how it is. It's good that we both know how each other think enough at this point that we tend to land in the same place. We also sometimes have disagreements and we talk there's out and, you know, one person is more persuasive than the other. But I can tell you one thing, I could not do a book of this, on this compressed time frame, this difficulty on my own. And I don't want to speak for Maggie, but I don't think she could either. And it was only with
this combination that we could produce what we've produced. You know, you see the acknowledgments to this book that it was the hardest thing that either of you, you and Maggie, everyone have done professionally, that you pushed yourselves to the physical brink over the past three years. You know, you're both
“veteran reporters. Why was this so hard and physically punishing? Well, I think it's hard to convey”
this to someone who's not a journalist, but if anyone who understands what it requires to render a scene inside a room when you weren't in the room. And then add the level of difficulty that these are some of the most guarded rooms in the world, the overall office in the White House situation
room. And then you add the second layer of difficulty, which is that these are, in many cases,
sensitive conversations that are not, you know, information that the administration necessarily wants to be made public. And then add the third layer of difficulty, which is unreliability of narration and,
You know, a president who is extremely paranoid about leaks, all those factor...
scene extremely difficult. One scene that we are certain is correct, that we feel comfortable
“putting under our names. And then to do that page after page after page, you know, most of this book”
is original reporting that has never appeared anywhere else. So for all those reasons, it was a pretty
miserable experience and we're both pretty relieved to finish the thing. I do want to note that President Trump, in a social media post, called the book Garbage Fake News and Boring, but I don't know that he or anyone has really seriously challenged factual assertions or quotes. Are there any disputes about anything that you've reported? The only dispute is Trump's all purpose, what thing that you just read. In fact, we have highly detailed scenes in the situation room
that now have been out there for weeks, actually months on Iran, but weeks on Epstein and whatever, where we have very detailed dialogue attributed to people in these meetings, not one denial. So far.
Now, maybe Trump asked them to deny it. And in fact, the Vice President J.D. Vance told Megan
Kelly on Epocuss that he thinks we have recordings, which we are when up commenting on whether we do all we don't, but anyone who can listen to that would come to the conclusion that he's essentially validating accuracy, if he's saying that. And before I let you go, I have to ask you, you've continued to report on the administration. And it's been a rough time for Trump. You know, the war in Iran has not gone well. His poll numbers are bad. And there are some signs of
restiveness among Republicans in Congress. The midterms are looming. Do you think he's losing some
“of his grip on the party? I think he's got a strong grip on the party than most commentators”
right now are willing to admit. He certainly lost a lot of altitude when it comes to independent
voters. And he's very unpopular, generally. Most of his problems in the Senate are down to a small number of senators that he's either defeated. And so they're hanging around until they leave, or have retired after falling out with Trump. So yes, he does have some issues in the Senate, but it's sort of less than meets the eye, I think. I think he has demonstrated that when it comes to the Republican Party, his grip is still pretty tight. Jonathan Swan, congratulations on the
book. Thank you for speaking with us. Thanks so much for having me. Jonathan Swan is a White House correspondent for The New York Times. He's the author with fellow Times White House correspondent
“Maggie Haberman of the New Book regime change inside the Imperial Presidency of Donald Trump.”
We recorded our interview yesterday. On tomorrow's show, we speak with Nephi Craig, founder of the Native American Culinary Association. He'll talk about growing up on an Apache reservation and how cooking native food saved his life after years of alcohol addiction. He left his job as a chef at a fine dining restaurant to run a cafe affiliated with the reservations substance abuse treatment center. I hope you can join us. To keep up with what's on
the show, then get highlights of our interviews, follow us on Instagram at NPR Fresh Air. Fresh Air's executive producer is Sam Brigher, our technical director and engineer is Audrey Bentham, with additional engineering support from Adam Standashewski. Our interviews and reviews are produced and edited by Phyllis Myers and Marie Baldonato, Lauren Crenzel, Theresa Madden, Monique Nazareth, Thayette Challner, Susan Yacundee, Anna Bowen and Nico Gonzalez-Wisler.
Our digital media producer is Molly CV Nesper, Roberta Schorock directs the show. For Terry Gross and Tanya Mosley, I'm Dave Davies. So you've decided you want to be more active. Exercise scientist Keith Diaz says, "Put away the smartwatch. Start by noticing your body's natural cues." For us to build a habit to check back in with our bodies,
that behavior is much more likely to stick. Tracking with the body needs, that's on the Ted Radio Hour podcast, listen on the NPR app or wherever you get your podcasts. Nukes, what can't they do? Nuclear weapons are called a cure for the cancer of global conventional conflict. On a new episode of "R We Doed," the view within the U.S. government that the only way for peace is more nukes. Join me for "R We Doed," distributed by the NPR network.
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