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Katie Tur
When you look at the White House, it's a symbol of who we are as Americans. We rejected the gold leaf of the monarchy. And Donald Trump, he's so enamored with the pomp and circumstance of royalty and of dictatorships that he's going and trying to literally glue it onto the White House piece by piece. When you look at the Oval Office right now, it is stunning to see the face, the facelift he's given it. It's like, you know, the Mar A Lago facelift. He's given it to the Oval Office. It's not real and it's not authentic. It's not American any longer.
Joanna Coles
I'm Joanna Coles. This is the Daily Beast podcast. And today we have Trump chronicler Katie Tur on the show. She talks about his health, she talks about the grift, she talks about the state fair. Why isn't anybody there? And this is a woman whose first book, Unbelievable, sold millions of copies as she chronicled him on the campaign and then in his first term in office. She's now, of course, host of the Moment on Ms. Now, but she has opinions about everything. So before we get into it, just a reminder, we're literally like 2,000 memberships off, getting to 700,000. So if you haven't subscribed to the Daily Beast, the reason we can bring you independent conversations is because we are genuinely independent media. But we love your support. We need your support. So please subscribe to the Daily Beast. If you haven't become a Bee Beast member, become a friend of the Beast. But we love your support and Katie Teur so much to talk about. Let's get into it. Katie Teur, very good to have you back on the podcast.
Katie Tur
Thank you for having me, Joanna.
Joanna Coles
Thank you. What the hell is going on in the Republican Party?
Katie Tur
I think the Republicans are asking themselves that right now. What is going on? What does Donald Trump want? It doesn't seem to be the Republicans winning the midterms.
Joanna Coles
Right. So how, how upset are Republican congresspeople and senators by this? I mean, he seems to be almost going out of his way to be disruptive to, to their chances, which are already slim. I mean, he seems to be the real issue that the Democrats are going to run on.
Katie Tur
Well, some of the Republicans are just fine with it. Mike Lee is just fine with it. Some others, some are extraordinarily upset about it. Thom Tillis is one of them. We've seen Bill Cassidy come out and get angry. John Cornyn, even. These are people that Donald Trump has primaried.
Joanna Coles
But they're all leaving. So it's not hard for them to come out.
Katie Tur
No, it's not hard for them. But there is a. You can tell that there is a growing discontent by the way they're voting, by the way they're voting on more powers. What they are willing to do, Donald Trump wants them to overturn the filibuster to get his Save America act through. They are not willing to do that. There aren't even. There isn't even a full slate of Republicans who are willing to vote for that, let alone 10 Democrats, let alone enough Republicans to overturn the filibuster because they understand that time marches forward and there might come a time where they are not in power and losing the filibuster would be a problem for them. So there is a lot of discontent because their goal is to get reelected. Their goal is to put some legislation on the floor, to vote for it, to get him to sign it, and he's not doing that. He's got a housing bill in front of him right now that was dispatched to him by the speaker a couple of days ago. He still has not signed it. I think he called it dull or boring or something the other day.
Joanna Coles
Right.
Katie Tur
A housing bill that the Republicans can. Can run on. On two things. One, we can work with Democrats. We are not incapable of bipartisanship. We can make your lives better. And number two, look, we have made your lives better. We understand that you're having problems with affordability. We understand that many young people especially don't think that the American dream is possible any longer because they can't afford a house. We are addressing that. Keep us in power.
Joanna Coles
Right.
Katie Tur
They can't do that because the president hasn't signed the bill.
Joanna Coles
So we're hearing that there's a lot of shouting. There was a Republican lunch this week for senators, and he shouted at people. He shouted at people again last night. There were reports of sort of loud, raised voices. You've covered Donald Trump ever since he descended in Trump Tower. Your first book, Unbelievable, was about the 510 days you spent on the campaign. No one has observed him more closely than you.
Katie Tur
Now, you and Jonathan Swan might be. Well, they might be a little bit closer at this point.
Joanna Coles
Just written the most recent book. Right. But there's a whole group of you who've been following and watching this man for a long time. Do you think he's changed?
Katie Tur
I think he's just more himself. And I think that happens to all of us as we get older, we become more ourselves.
Joanna Coles
Oh, God.
Katie Tur
And more insular. I think it's true. But he's the President of the United States and he is acting like once he is done with this, nothing else matters. And what we're seeing is, I mean, he used to be. He used to talk directly to people about what they were experiencing. I mean, some would say that he wasn't, you know, tethered to truth about what was going on, but he knew how to read a room and he understood people's grievances or frustrations and what they wanted. I mean, he was on the road all the time.
Joanna Coles
So when you say people, do you mean regular people?
Katie Tur
I mean regular people.
Joanna Coles
Right, Regular people. So he was listening, he was getting feedback from voters and stuff.
Katie Tur
You know this. If you are in a room with Donald Trump, he's like a comedian. He's road testing what lines work on you. He's watching how you react and he's reacting to your reaction. He can do it one on one and he can do it at an entire rally. And he was so good at that in 2016 and so good at that even during the first administration when he was always going out and having rallies, even as president. So he understood the American public. But since he left office, during the intervening time where he was not president and now he's done far less rallies. I mean, he did some while he was campaigning. Yes, and he won again. But he has lost that touch that he's had with the American public. And it doesn't seem like he cares or wants to be back in touch. He's going through the greatest hits of his lines. Democrats made that up. It's a hoax. Don't worry about it. Everybody loves me. I'm your favorite president. He's no longer talking about the things that they're saying very clearly in poll after poll or any interview that you hear matter to them. That's the cost of living.
Joanna Coles
Right? So where does he go from here? I mean, what's your prediction? In as much as one can predict anything about Donald Trump, who is the least predictable person? And also unpredictable events happen to Donald Trump, too. Not Lease Butler, Pennsylvania. Do you have a sort of sense of what you think is going to happen at the midterms?
Katie Tur
So I think that if you look at the way things are happening right now, it seems pretty clear the Democrats have a very easy path to take over the House, and they may have a path to take over the Senate. So there could be a situation where he loses both. If he loses both by wide margins, he will be a little bit more hamstrung if he loses one or both by a tighter margin. I think what you're going to hear is what you always hear, which is that the election's rigged, right? And he will try to say that it doesn't count, it's invalid. This party has no bearing over him. The Congress should have no authority over him because it's invalid led Congress. I think you're going to hear all of that. The question is how far will it go? Will he try to will he try to get electors not to certify the vote again? Will he put pressure on them? Will he present evidence from his dni Bill Pulte, the acting guy that tries to dispute what happened there's already reporting that they're trying to declassify material that they say will help him on the 2020 election interference claims that he had made. So I think you just you it's hard to predict what exactly will happen, but I think you can safely say that if he loses, he will say it's not fair and it's rigged.
Joanna Coles
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Katie Tur
Because he can't lose. It's an ego thing.
Joanna Coles
Oh, it's because he can't.
Katie Tur
He just cannot he literally cannot accept that he. That he has lost.
Joanna Coles
Right.
Katie Tur
He's unable to do it now. Maybe he intellectually understands that he did. But I would venture to say at this point, he has so convinced himself of the lie about the election being rigged against him that he actually believes that he won. It's a delusion.
Joanna Coles
Right. So there's all sorts of speculation about his health. We know that the White House has said he's got chronic venous insufficiency, which is not uncommon in someone of his age. There are a lot of people saying that he's beginning to show, especially because you can track his language over the last 40, 50 years because he's never stopped talking.
Katie Tur
I mean, go back and look at a clip of him from 2000. It is shocking how coherent he was compared to what he. What he is now. He could keep a thought and he could keep going with that thought, and he could answer questions cogently. And today he's just all over the place.
Joanna Coles
So you think. Do you think there's a mental difference now?
Katie Tur
I think that there's a mental difference in the way that he speaks today than even 2016, than 2020, I think. I don't think you need to ask me that. You can go and look and see it for yourself in the clips.
Joanna Coles
But as someone who's observed him, you've noticed it.
Katie Tur
He's more chaotic in the way that he answers questions. He goes on more tangents. He doesn't follow a thought clearly.
Joanna Coles
And he's president, so that's alarming that he doesn't follow a thought clearly.
Katie Tur
I mean, I would think that anybody who's concerned about. Who's concerned about Joe Biden would have been concerned about this.
Joanna Coles
Right, Right. So we should be at the State Fair. Both of us should be at the State Fair. We should be with your children. Except it's going to be 100 degrees. What do you think of the celebrations in Washington this week? I mean, you've been watching them, you've been chronicling them on your show on Ms. Now, are you, you know, you're an American. Is this something that you feel proud of?
Katie Tur
I think what is most disheartening about what we're seeing, and I'm gonna say disheartening because it shouldn't be about Donald Trump. It shouldn't be about maga.
Joanna Coles
Right.
Katie Tur
It should be about the American public and this country and telling a story of who we are, where we came from and where we are going. I think we saw that so beautifully with what President Obama did the other day, the dedication to his library. He told a story about this country and how far we've come. And he gave people on every side of the political spectrum a reason to believe in this country and to be proud to be an American. And there are so many folks out there who are grasping for that today. They want to be able to say, hey, this country, yeah, complicated, full of mistakes. We have not been the best to ourselves, to our own people, and we have not been the best to foreign lands and foreigners. But we have been good, by and large. We have done good, and we can do more good if we all believe in it. I think we need that as a country right now. We are so divided. And he has this opportunity at her 250th birthday to try to bridge that divide. And we shouldn't be surprised, but he's not taking it. He's making it about himself. It feels like a political rally. He had that. That wrestling match on the ufc. Ufc? The fighting match, excuse me, on the White House lawn. That's not representative of what Americans watch. The majority of the public isn't watching that. You had a guy stand up and call the former first lady a man. Americans aren't looking for that. They're looking to celebrate this country and themselves and our democracy. They're not looking to celebrate Donald Trump or maga. So in my opinion, that is what is disappointing about what we're witnessing. The state fair, sure, in theory, it's a good idea, but in actuality, it feels very partisan because Donald Trump makes everything so partisan, because he's made it about himself and made it all about maga. You had a bunch of performers drop out. They didn't want to be a part of something that was so partisan. They wanted to be a part of something that was celebrating this country. And it feels empty. And it is empty, or it is empty because it feels empty.
Joanna Coles
Right. Well, another thing that he's made sure of is that he's filling his own coffers. I was astonished to find there's still a government office of ethics came out with a report this week saying that Donald Trump has made $2.2 billion since he's been president. Now, we know that last time he was president, he felt that he hadn't made enough money on it, that he'd actually, you know, he had had to put things in blind trusts that, you know, he felt he'd missed out on regular earning opportunities. Now, happily for Donald Trump, he's dug in. He's dug into the grift yeah, he
Katie Tur
said nobody cared that he made money last time.
Joanna Coles
Right.
Katie Tur
So why would he stop now?
Joanna Coles
So what, you know, you're looking at this. What do you think about this? Is this, this is. Well, we know this is really unusual behavior for a president to help himself and his.
Katie Tur
Not really unusual. It's unprecedented. No one's ever done this before.
Joanna Coles
Okay, fair.
Katie Tur
And I hate saying, I mean, the word unprecedented is a cliche. Everything's unprecedented that he does. He is breaking all the rules and all the norms, all of the shame somebody might have had for making money off the President's presidency. Donald Trump doesn't have shame in that way. So it doesn't bother him. Yesterday on the show I was talking about before the financial disclosure came out and we learned all of the ways in which he's making money off crypto and like actually just putting it, it seems, in his pocket. I was talking about the New York Post editorial about his son.
Joanna Coles
Okay, I missed that. What did it say about his sons?
Katie Tur
The New York Post called out his sons and Howard Lutnick's sons for the Kazakhstan tungsten deal. It's a billion dollar, maybe a billion point eight dollar deal between the government and the country of Kazakhstan for their tungsten. And it's been linked to firms that have ties to both sets of sons. And the New York Post said enough is enough. This has gone too far. I mean, they tried to equate it to Hunter Biden, which I think is
Joanna Coles
silly, and that's Hunter Biden's deal with
Katie Tur
the UK but they said when Hunter Biden and Joe Biden did it, it wasn't right. It's certainly not right if you do it. And in trying to put it into context, I was searching around for a George H.W. bush letter that he wrote to his sons before he became president while he was running. And he wrote them saying, as we get closer to November, you're going to find yourself having a whole lot of friends, a whole lot of new friends.
Joanna Coles
Right.
Katie Tur
What I ask of you, what I beg of you, is that you never call a government entity anything linked to the government and drop your name because you're going to get a call back. But that call is likely going to get leaked and likely going to, at worst, be misrepresented. And it brought me back to something that happened with Reagan and his son Michael. He was a, he worked for a military contractor and he wrote a letter to an Air Force base that surface serviced Air Force One saying, my father is proud of this country and I know that he's proud of Air Force One. I'm summarizing, and we'd like to be considered for future contracts, me and my. The military contractor that he was associated with. It got leaked. The press put it out there, and the American public went wild and said, this is absolutely not acceptable. And Michael Reagan had to resign from that position.
Joanna Coles
Right.
Katie Tur
With the military contractor. I mean, and this was not a business that he was standing to make millions and millions and millions of dollars off of. It used to be that the American public didn't stand for this sort of behavior. They held our presidents and the families to a higher standard.
Joanna Coles
Well, and is it even a higher standard? It's just an appropriate. Appropriate. An appropriate standard for lack of conflict of interest.
Katie Tur
Absolutely. And so my question is, why are we here now where enough of the American public seems to be okay with this? I mean, we're gonna have another chance to find out if they really are in November. I mean, this will be the American voters chance to say, I do believe there should be a standard of conduct for the guy in the White House, and I do believe there should be a standard of conduct that Congress holds them to. So we'll see if that happens. But, I mean, the exponentially worse degree to which Donald Trump and his family are using his name and the White House and the presidency to enrich themselves, you cannot make a comparison to anybody else in American history.
Joanna Coles
Well, and also the first lady who got $40 million from Amazon for a film about her, which is the most banal, although strangely revealing, I think, unwittingly revealing, movie about her and also her book. And it's, you know, we've seen Jill Biden's on a book tour now. Dr. Biden selling her book about her experience in the White House. But usually presidents do it after first ladies do it after Michelle Obama obviously did becoming. They don't monetize the job while they're in office.
Katie Tur
No, I mean, there's a line you don't cross usually. The, the financial disclosure I thought was most striking in the amount of money that he's making off of crypto. I mean, it was like $2.2 billion total. But one point, I have notes. 1.4 billion from crypto.
Joanna Coles
Right.
Katie Tur
And so the White House, in trying to push back on it, says that Donald Trump has no conflict of interest, but he's proud to make America like the capital of crypto around the world.
Joanna Coles
Of course he is.
Katie Tur
Right. But they're. They're revealing the conflict. They're confirming the conflict in the statement it's like if Donald Trump said, I want to be, I want to make America the washing machine capital of the world. And he was the owner of Maytag.
Joanna Coles
Right?
Katie Tur
Like, like, obviously there is a conflict there. Or like I want America to be the soybean capital of the world. And he owned, owned all the soybean farms.
Joanna Coles
Right.
Katie Tur
So when he's saying this about crypto and he has the power to loosen regulations, which he had, has, maybe it's good for America to be the capital of crypto, but it's certainly, certainly good and has been good for him.
Joanna Coles
I found that list where they detailed what he made from each thing really interesting because it was, I think 200. Was it $208,000 from the Trump Bible. It was, I think $67,000 from fragrance and his gold shoes. And you're like, and who's buying this stuff? And I think 4 million from Trump watches, actually.
Katie Tur
I mean, it's just so it's also the meme coin. I mean, what did he get make $635 million on the meme coin? That, that's nothing. You are basically just putting money into Donald Trump's pocket, Right. To have this thing that doesn't even exist in real life. Who's paying for this? Maybe it's some regular Americans, but it also is. Are there also people who are using it to pay for access to him? Actual access to him?
Joanna Coles
Right. Well, let's talk about access to him, because obviously one way that companies are doing that and people are doing that is by donating to the east wing, which he ripped down. And now in theory, he's rebuilding it as a huge 90,000 foot ballroom, which I still find incredible and will dwarf the existing White House. I mean, that's what's so strange, that it's just gonna look crazy.
Katie Tur
I wonder, you know, I think if the ballroom was to a better scale and it was done tastefully, would the American public have such a problem with it?
Joanna Coles
Oh, I'm sure they wouldn't. Right. Because actually, you could argue they do need a ballroom.
Katie Tur
They have their state dinners.
Joanna Coles
I'm sure you've been to them. You have to go on a living room.
Katie Tur
I've not been to a state dinner. No.
Joanna Coles
Well, I've been to one and I was shocked that it was in a tent and that you had to get in a little golf cart and be taken there. They have like little miniature trains. Was a super fun evening. I'm not going to pretend it wasn't, but I was shocked that they, they had to establish a marquee for it instead of having an event space. So I can see his argument for that. But the way it's been done, and he said it was going to be 250 million, now it's. Now it's 400 million, now it might be a billion, because they're adding all sorts of hospital facilities and a bunker. Right, A bunker. Now they want drones on the route. I mean, it's a.
Katie Tur
And it's going to come from taxpayers.
Joanna Coles
Right. And it's a sort of Swiss army knife of buildings. It's sort of everything Donald Trump has ever wanted from a building, I think.
Katie Tur
Yeah. It's like he said, well, we, you know, I need a bunker to be safe. Let me destroy the bunker we have. So I'm going to force you to build me a better bunker. The way in which he's doing this, not, I mean, breaking the rules is one thing, I think. You know, I'm not sure how much people care about him breaking construction code.
Joanna Coles
Right.
Katie Tur
I. There's a brazenness with which he just does whatever he wants. It's very plain. And now you have images, actual physical images of it. You have the image of the construction side of the White House, which every time you look at it, it is. It is a shocking thing to see.
Joanna Coles
Yeah, it is.
Katie Tur
Now, you have the destroyed lawn from the UFC fight and what appears to be. There's a big circle on the. I think it's the South Lawn now. I think that could be where maybe where a helipad is going, right?
Joanna Coles
That's right.
Katie Tur
He's adding a helipad, a really gaudy gold eagle to one of the balconies, the outside balconies.
Joanna Coles
Has he actually added that?
Katie Tur
Well, the White House showed an image of it, so I don't actually know unless they just put it up there for a second.
Joanna Coles
Well, you lead me on to another thing, because I thought that was an AI image and really of his intent, I think. But somewhat ominously, there is now scaffolding surrounding the actual White House. The famous column, they say that they're
Katie Tur
just updating or restoring the columns. Who knows, though? But you can't take the White House at their word.
Joanna Coles
No, you absolutely can't.
Katie Tur
And the American public, when you look at the White House, it's a symbol of who we are as Americans. We are a country that broke away from a monarchy. We. We rejected the trappings of a monarchy. We rejected the gold leaf of the monarchy. And Donald Trump is going. And he.
Joanna Coles
He.
Katie Tur
He's so enamored with the pomp and circumstance of royalty and of dictatorships that he's going and trying to literally glue it onto the White House piece by piece. One of. One of, I think, the best parts of Maggie and John's new book, Regime Change.
Joanna Coles
And this is Maggie Haberman and Jonathan Swan.
Katie Tur
Was Washington a part where they're describing Donald Trump on his hands and knees, super gluing gold appliques to the fireplace in the Oval Office like you have on your door here?
Joanna Coles
Well, we have. We should show our door because we've done it as a mock homage to what they're doing.
Katie Tur
And when you look at the Oval Office right now, it is stunning to see the face, the facelift he's given it. It's like the, you know, the Mar a Lago facelift. He's given it to the Oval Office. It's not real and it's not authentic. It's not American any longer. We are not a country of. Of gaudy decorations. We're not a country of gold leaf. We are a country of, like, down home, homespun, pick yourself up from your bootstraps, you know, grit and determination. That's who we are as a country. That's what we started out as. And he's trying to change it unilaterally. And I think that while Americans might not be able to. To pinpoint exactly why they feel uncomfortable with it, they do feel uncomfortable with looking at how he's physically changed the White House. Physically trying to change Washington.
Joanna Coles
Yeah. And I think your point about building code and people maybe not being too anxious about him breaking it is because it's so relatable for anybody who's tried to updo their house or do anything. You have to file the most annoying kind of bureaucracy here in New York City. It's impossible to do anything. I have a poor man who bought the apartment opposite me three and a half years ago. He still hasn't been able to get approval from the Buildings Department. So these things go on. I think people are sympathetic to that. Less sympathetic to the meddling of the White House. And it's so familiar, the White House and the modesty of it. And then this terrible demolition that seemed to happen in the middle of the night, too. So people woke up and it was gone suddenly.
Katie Tur
It was gone.
Joanna Coles
Yeah, gone. And there was no historic coding paid attention to. And. And it's, as you say, it's a. It's a sort of taste.
Katie Tur
But also, how well is the. Is the job going to be done? Look at the reflecting pool he spent, what, $14 million trying to restore the reflecting blue, which had problems for a long time, but he spent that money. And a few days later, a few days later, the bottom of the paint is peeling off, right? And it's totally green because there's been an algae bloom. I mean, if you are going to do something and you're going to spend that money, you're going to tout it, do it right, and at least have it work for a few months. But Donald Trump has these no bid contractors. You talk to people with any expertise in this and they'll say, well, you put a darker bottom on the pool down, you did it in the middle of summer, it's going to get hot. And when it's hot, it's easier for algae to bloom. That's basic science, right? If you're going to do this, do it in the fall when it's cooler and when it has a chance to settle. Like, I'm no pool expert. So who's, who's doing the construction of the white, of the, of the ballroom, Another apparently no bid contract. How well is that going to be done? Is it to be something that lasts for another 100, 200, 300 years, or is it something that's going to fall apart in a few months?
Joanna Coles
Right. And also he was referring himself to a builder that this is the thing he really loves doing, this is the thing he knows how to do. And yet actually what he does is slap his name on the side of buildings. How significant is it that the courts decided he had to take his name off?
Katie Tur
I think it's very significant. I think that any time that he is forced to back down is significant. There's a question of does this democracy survive? How threatened are we right now? I think we're threatened, but I feel good about all the ways in which our system has pushed back against Donald Trump. And we're seeing that in the courts. We're seeing that even to a degree with the Supreme Court, which is like got this crazy, wild, arguably extreme theory on the unitary executive, but that's the executive. When it comes to Donald Trump specifically, they overruled his tariffs. They didn't let him overrule birthright citizenship.
Joanna Coles
Right. That was this week.
Katie Tur
You know, divide is a little depressing.
Joanna Coles
That was crazy that it was six to three and you're like three people
Katie Tur
thought it was five to four on constitutional grounds.
Joanna Coles
Right, Right.
Katie Tur
So, I mean, it could have been even closer. But regardless, they're pushing back on the moves that he has made specifically. And at the Same time you're seeing so many voters go out and participate in special elections, go out and participate in primaries. The reaction to Donald Trump has not been muted. The American public is pushing back. And so if I am feeling hopeful about this democracy and hopeful about what will happen to us afterwards, and there's a whole lot of reasons to not be hopeful, I look to all of the ways in which the system, even under all of this stress, is continuing to hold.
Joanna Coles
Okay, well, that's an optimistic.
Katie Tur
Slightly positive.
Joanna Coles
Yeah, that is slightly positive. So what are you planning to do for July 4th? How are you planning to celebrate it?
Katie Tur
I'm gonna be with my friends. We're gonna go to the beach and watch some fireworks. I'm gonna be with my kids and do it the way that I've always done it, which is gather with the ones I love and try to think of the ways in which I am proud to be an American because I am proud to be an American and all of the ways that I want to participate in this democracy to make it better. It's simple. I mean, it's not going to be top of my mind for the entire holiday, but on this 250 year anniversary, I do think it's important to remind ourselves why it's. Why fighting for this country is a, is a fight worth having.
Joanna Coles
Katie Tua, thank you so much for coming into the studio. It's so good to hear you. And happy July 4th, you two.
Katie Tur
How are you celebrating our breakaway?
Joanna Coles
Also celebrating with friends. I'm sure there'll be some fireworks and I'm planning to relax. I'm planning to relax. It's a holiday weekend.
Katie Tur
Pim's cup or beer.
Joanna Coles
Probably wine. Probably rose. Is that terrible? I think it might be terrible, but you know, a bit of summer in a bottle, I love that.
Katie Tur
Thanks for having me.
Joanna Coles
What is going on with that very ominous scaffolding at the front of the White House? That familiar portico? Why do I feel like it's going to change and that the columns that Donald Trump was filmed stroking three weeks ago, there was something going on there? I suspect we're going to see another facelift of the White House. Anyway, the moment it happens or the moment we know more about it happening, we'll be bringing you that news. If you have been. Thank you for watching us, thank you for following us. Feel free to subscribe. And a big thank you to our production team, John Romero, Ryan Murray, Rachel Passer, Heather Passaro and Neil Rosenhaus. So the good news is we have so many Beast Tier members now there are too many names to read out, and we really appreciate your support.
Episode: I Know What Trump's D.C. Makeover Is Really About
Host: Joanna Coles
Guest: Katie Tur
Date: July 2, 2026
This episode features journalist and Trump chronicler Katie Tur in conversation with Joanna Coles. They dissect Donald Trump’s physical and symbolic "makeover" of the White House and Washington, the recent shifts in Republican politics, questions surrounding Trump’s health, and the ongoing blurring of public office and personal gain. Throughout, Tur brings decades of insight, having observed Trump closely as a reporter, campaign chronicler, and anchor.
On Trump’s Makeover:
On Partisanship at National Events:
On Trump’s Obsession with the Past:
On Self-Enrichment:
On Hope for Democracy:
The episode’s tone is urgent, candid, and reflective. Both Coles and Tur engage in witty, incisive banter, but never shy away from real concern about the state of American democracy and the symbolism behind Trump’s actions. Quotations are verbatim, with Tur’s directness amplifying the sense of alarm and the stakes for the country.
For listeners who missed the episode, this summary captures the deep dive into the current political moment, the symbolism of leadership, and the ongoing struggle over American identity—both aesthetic and ethical.