The Daily - Trump 2.0: A Year of Unconstrained Power

In the 365 days since Donald J. Trump was sworn into his second term as president, he has fired, pardoned, prosecuted, tariffed, deployed, deposed, dismantled and deported his way to a new kind of American government, one designed almost entirely in his image. In the process, he has not only transformed the federal government, he has also changed, possibly forever, the very nature of the American presidency.

On today’s episode, Michael Barbaro speaks with three longtime chroniclers of Trump’s presidency about how to make sense of what Trump has done over the past year and what his next three years in office might bring.

Guests:

  • Maggie Haberman, a White House correspondent for The New York Times.
  • Jonathan Swan, a White House reporter for The New York Times.
  • Charlie Savage, who covers national security and legal policy for The New York Times.

For more information on today’s episode, visit nytimes.com/thedaily.

Photo: Kenny Holston/The New York TImes

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Start Here - Prize Fighter: Trump’s Shocking Greenland Text

President Trump sends a late-night text to the Norwegian prime minister, suggesting his Nobel Peace Prize snub justifies military action in Greenland. One year after a measles outbreak in Texas, the U.S. could lose its “elimination status” from the World Health Organization. And China reveals data showing its birth rate plummeted last year.

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The Daily Detail - The Daily Detail for 1.20.26

Alabama

  • AG Marshall says he is not going anywhere re: Republican senate primary
  • AG Commissioner Rick Pate files docs to enter the Lt. Governor's race
  • State Senator Orr files bill to address police pursuits across counties
  • State Rep Givens offers bill with harsher penalties for threats to public officials
  • Senate primary candidate Jarred Hudson says Don Lemon threatening kids in church is "pure evil"
  • Author Auron Macintyre says Somali fraud in MN is a thread leading to a greater fraud operation in the US

National

  • DHS Sec. Noem says ICE agents have arrested 10K illegals in MN
  • MN pastor talks about church that was invaded by anti-ICE protestors
  • US State Dept ends all financial assistance to the country of Somalia
  • Lawyer for Tina Peters says she was targeted and attacked in prison
  • Elon Musk lawsuit against Open AI and defrauding will start this April

Pod Save America - That’ll Leave a Denmark

Trump tells the Norwegian Prime Minister that he no longer feels an "obligation" to peace because he didn't receive the Nobel Prize and announces that he's imposing tariffs on a series of NATO allies until "a deal is reached for the complete and total purchase of Greenland." Jon, Lovett, and Tommy discuss these latest developments and Trump's billion-dollar entry fee for the Board of Peace. Then, they cover the latest from ICE's occupation of Minneapolis, including the Justice Department's investigations into Mayor Jacob Fry and Governor Tim Walz, and break down some positive polling about the Democrats chances in the 2026 midterm elections. Then, Tommy talks to Jason Zengerle about his new book, published by Crooked Media Reads, that explores the rise of Tucker Carlson — "Hated by All the Right People."


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What A Day - Will Claude Code Change Everything?

Today marks a year since President Donald Trump took office for a second time, and a lot has happened. Amidst all the threats to take over Greenland, the Liberation Day tariffs, and the crackdown on education, artificial intelligence development has continued to accelerate — and it's only getting faster. Over the last few months, you may have heard about Claude Code – a product of Anthropic – that makes coding incredibly easy. But the thing about Claude Code that's really cool is that it might be learning how to improve itself. So to talk more about Claude Code, what it does, and what it could do in the future, we spoke to Lila Shroff. She's an assistant editor at The Atlantic, with a focus on AI.

And in headlines, President Donald Trump exchanges some heated texts with the Prime Minister of Norway, new research finds Americans are footing the bill for Trump's tariffs, and Americans in all 50 states are staging a walkout to protest the Trump administration's "escalating fascist threat."

Show Notes:
 


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WSJ Tech News Briefing - Inside Netflix’s Push to Stream Live Events

Netflix has continued to expand, with partnerships, diversification, and a focus on broadcasting live events and sports. WSJ’s Isabelle Bousquette explains the technical challenges of this new frontier for streamers. Plus, WSJ reporter Ben Fritz explains actor Matthew McConaughey’s attempt to fight AI fakes. Peter Champelli hosts.


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The Indicator from Planet Money - Are U.S. defense contractors lavishing their investors too much?

In early January, President Donald Trump signed an executive order threatening bans on defense contractors paying dividends or buying their stock back.

Today on the show, we learn about the Trump Administration’s frustrations with the weapons supply chain, find out what a defense industry investor makes of the move, and ask whether this reflects the state tightening its grip on the industry that arms the U.S. military.

Related episodes: 
Are we overpaying for military equipment?
Can Just-In-Time handle a new era of war?
How to transform a war economy for peacetime

For sponsor-free episodes of The Indicator from Planet Money, subscribe to Planet Money+ via Apple Podcasts or at plus.npr.org. Fact-checking by Sierra Juarez. Music by Drop Electric. Find us: TikTok, Instagram, Facebook, Newsletter

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The Best One Yet - 👠 “Devil Wears Gap” — The Gap’s fashion-tainment. Spotify’s fitness play. BYOPower. +2016 stocks.

Spotify is popping prices again and playing us AI music… Its next move? Spotify Sweat.

The Gap just hired a Chief Entertainment Officer… because every brand needs a movie studio.

The hot abbreviation in this economy? BYOP = “Bring Your Own Power”... And GE Vernova is the winner.

The year 2016 is going viral… we’re looking back at the 2016 stock market (Nvidia was $1)


$GPS $SPOT $GEV


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NPR's Book of the Day - ‘Firestorm’ tells journalistic – and personal – story of the LA wildfires

Jacob Soboroff was one of the reporters on the front lines of last year’s devastating wildfires in Los Angeles. For him, the story was also deeply personal: He grew up in the Palisades, one of several neighborhoods engulfed by the flames. In his new book Firestorm: The Great Los Angeles Fires and America’s New Age of Disaster, Soboroff provides a firsthand account of the Palisades and Eaton fires – and tries to understand what went wrong. In today’s episode, Soboroff speaks with Here & Now’s Peter O’Dowd about witnessing the destruction of his childhood neighborhood and the political aftermath of the fires.


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Short Wave - Is ‘The Pitt’ accurate? Medical experts weigh in

Medical drama The Pitt is winning Golden Globes… and health care workers’ hearts. Medical experts say the show, which chronicles a fictional Pittsburgh hospital emergency department, is perhaps the most medically accurate show that’s ever been created. But what about The Pitt makes it so accurate… and does the second season hold up as well as the first? Stanford Global Health Media Fellow (and fourth-year medical school student) Michal Ruprecht joins Short Wave to discuss.

Have a question about YOUR favorite show and whether science supports it? Email us at shortwave@npr.org.


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This episode was produced by Hannah Chinn. It was edited by Rebecca Ramirez. Tyler Jones checked the facts. The audio engineer was Maggie Luthar.

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