New Trump bookâs authors detail how they pried loose White House secrets: âWe nearly killed ourselvesâ
Maggie Haberman and Jonathan Swan, the reporters behind Regime Change, were up against an administration that is âvery good at keeping secretsâ
They cracked the White House situation room, unearthing secrets from the heart of a secretive administration. But the reporters behind Regime Change, a blockbuster new book on Donald Trumpâs second term, ran up against a wall when reporting on one issue surrounding the 80-year-old US president: his fitness for office.
âHis health has always been a very specific lockbox for him, going back decades,â Maggie Haberman, co-author with Jonathan Swan, said in an interview. âIllness freaks him out; he perceives illness as weakness, usually, and he certainly perceives any sense that he is having an issue as a projection of weakness, and his advisers are very, very attuned to that.
âSo the number of people who actually know what is happening with his health ⦠theyâve provided less and less information, except for saying things like, âHe saw 22 specialists,â but they wonât say who the specialists are at Walter Reed [National Military Medical Center], and it has been on just a sliding scale since term one. Frankly, 2018, I think, was the last time we got real information. Remember, they were not honest at all about how sick he was during Covid in 2020, and so weâve never really known the extent of that, or any after-effects.
âWill we know before the end of his term if there is something more significant? Doesnât seem likely on that trajectory. I donât want to make predictions.â
Trumpâs health is an example of how this administration is âvery good at keeping secretsâ, added Haberman. âThat is one, and always has been.â
As Trump slurs his words, shuffles down steps and sleeps in meetings while his hands are bruised and ankles are swollen, his every slowing move is scrutinized around the world. On the page, Haberman and Swan â who both report for The New York Times â describe sleep-ins after social media all-nighters; documents hoarded in chaotic, garbage-strewn quarters; and a mania for remodeling his surroundings that extends to the president being found in the Oval Office, trying to glue gold appliques over the fire.
But if aides donât dish on their boss, the boss canât help but dish on himself. In the set-piece interview that concludes Regime Change, Trump told the authors, âa historianâ â it turned out to be golfer Gary Playerâs caddie â compared him to Alexander the Great, the Caesars, William the Conqueror, Genghis Khan, Attila the Hun, Tamerlane, Napoleon Bonaparte, Adolf Hitler, Mao Zedong and Joseph Stalin.
âThereâs a reason that there hasnât been a ton of inside-the-room reporting since last year,â Swan said of the administration. âItâs because itâs really fucking hard. This is a tiny group of people running the government, and thereâs this canard that Trump puts out that, âIâm the most transparent president ever.â Itâs complete nonsense. Theyâre actually ⦠incredibly good at keeping secrets.â
Some can be prised loose. Regime Change describes Situation Room discussions about botched attempts to contain the scandal surrounding the late financier Jeffrey Epstein, his sexual abuse of underage girls, and his links to powerful figures â including Trump. After the Times published an excerpt, reporters swimming in Swan and Habermanâs wake revealed White Houseâs worries about how such material was obtained. Naturally, the pair are not about to reveal their sourcing. But they did describe how hard they had to work.
âIâll give you a recent example,â Swan said, pointing to the Memorandum of Understanding with Iran, signed last week. âOne of the most important documents you could possibly imagine, to end the war,â he said. âWhat were the terms? Almost no one inside the US government had seen that document until it was publicly announced.
âThe tiniest inner circle had seen it ⦠very senior people in the White House hadnât seen it. Very senior people in the state department and the Pentagon hadnât seen it ⦠there are parts of the intelligence community ⦠almost monitoring these talks like itâs a foreign government, you know. They have no idea whatâs being said in the room, how these things are coming together.â
And yet, Regime Change reports on how Trump chose to take the US to war with Iran, both in bombing nuclear facilities last summer and in joining Israel in all-out air assault this year.
âJust think about this for a second,â Swan said. âThe two people in the government that would have to handle the biggest energy shock in world history, Scott Bessent, the treasury secretary, Chris Wright, the energy secretary, werenât in the room for the meetings that led up to this war. They found out about the war the day before ⦠in the Situation Room.â
Swan and Haberman are uncomfortable with comparisons to Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein, the Washington Post pair who took down Richard Nixon. Regime Change feels like a first draft of history under the second Trump administration.
âWe really nearly killed ourselves during this book,â Haberman said. âWe are enormously proud of it. It does not mean, obviously, that itâs perfect, and it does not mean that there is not going to be more to tell about this period of time, but what we were trying to do was capture something deeper and richer than can be done in the day-to-day swirl.â
A lot of material didnât make the cut, for lack of confirmation. The focus, Haberman said, was a specific throughline: Trumpâs return, anâunprecedented-in-our-lifetimeâ use of presidential power, âand how he and a small group of people prepared for it, the events that drove itâ.
All this was âfairly effectiveâ for a time, she noted. âNow you are seeing obviously less so.â
Trump is deeply unpopular. Iran talks grind on. America is deeply fractured. The presidentâs attempts to plaster his name across the capital, increasingly absurd, remain mired in scandal.
Swan is a Washington DC reporter. Haberman is out of New York City. Her experience reporting on Trump in that city, the foundation of her book on his first term, Confidence Man, was invaluable in writing the second. Regarding the origins of Trumpâs mania for rebuilding â the ballroom, the arch, the reflecting pool fiasco â she makes a telling point.
âItâs interesting watching him talking about the reflecting pool constantly, because ⦠this is like the grander version of the Wollman Rink,â she said, referring to the ice rink that Trump finished in Central Park in 1986, after taking over a stalled public project. âHe has woven that into his origin story in New York. It was really a relatively small project, but [now] heâs planning to build this arch, heâs still trying to build this ballroom, he put his name on the Kennedy Center ⦠he never really got over the fact that [in the first term] his name was being torn off of buildings in New York.â