From Harold Meyerson, The American Prospect <[email protected]>
Subject Trump’s imaginary 2025
Date December 18, 2025 8:02 PM
  Links have been removed from this email. Learn more in the FAQ.
  Links have been removed from this email. Learn more in the FAQ.
Not surprisingly, his look back at his first year as our re-elected president bore no resemblance to anyone else’s 2025.**Click to view this email in your browser.**

[link removed]

DECEMBER 18, 2025

Hey! Small favor to ask before you scroll down to what you came here to do (read an excellent piece by Harold Meyerson). What has allowed Harold, Bob Kuttner, and David Dayen to write such illuminating work over the years are readers like you. We don't rely on corporate advertising or billionaire donors to fund our work – we’re beholden to no one but you, our readers, and our core mission of reporting on ideas, politics, and power. We have big plans for 2026 and we need to hit our $100,000 fundraising goal to do our critical work. If you believe in reader-supported, independent journalism can you chip in today to support our work?

SUPPORT US TODAY [link removed]

****MEYERSON ON TAP****

**Trump’s imaginary 2025**

**Not surprisingly, his look back at his first year as our re-elected president bore no resemblance to anyone else’s 2025.**

Donald Trump so rushed through his address to the nation last night that he gave the impression he didn’t really want to be there. Perhaps he was only going through the motions because his newly-in-the-news chief of staff Susie Wiles convinced him he had to say something about his first year back in the White House. As tearing his enemies down is the only thing Trump likes better than building himself up, however, Trump actually devoted more time to excoriating Joe Biden than to praising himself, though praising himself did come in a close second.

Praising himself for his achievements, however, required Trump to paint a picture of the nation that was unrecognizable to a sizable constituency: people, as such. As he told the tale, America had never been greater, the economy never more job-creatingly robust, the nation’s standing abroad never more respected. It’s possible, I suppose, that Trump actually believes this, that the men and women who filter the news he receives are so subservient that his comments to his aides are like the famous remark that classic Hollywood mogul Darryl F. Zanuck once made to his: “Don’t say yes until I finish talking.”

prospect.org/donate

Where Trump’s documentation of the stratospheric rise of our nation in the past year was lacking in verifiable specifics, he filled the gaps with adjectives and slogans. The state of the union was “amazing,” “greatest ever,” “never seen before in the history of the world.” And whatever still had room to improve was entirely the consequence of his predecessor, during whose presidency the nation had endured its lowest depths ever, worse than the Great Depression, worse than the Civil War. In the world of Donald Trump, at least as he depicts it for public consumption, nothing is gray; there’s either stygian darkness or almost blinding light.

Speaking of colors, Trump’s orange-ness has appeared to migrate downward. His hair was more silver than usual even as his face appeared to have acquired a deep orange tint. Whether that’s due not just to aging but to the hard hours he’s put in on the links, I cannot say.

I’ve **written** [link removed] before that Trump is more politically effective as an outsider hurling calumnies at his rivals than as a president who has to take some responsibility for what actually is transpiring. When he’s not in office (2016, 2022, 2024) he brings sometime-voter malcontents to the polls and Republicans do well; when he’s in office (2018, 2020), he brings out sometime voters appalled at how he’s actually governing. He’s in office now; that’s the primary edge that the Democrats will have next year.

Harold Meyerson
Editor-at-Large

**Harold Meyerson**
Editor-at-Large

On the

**Prospect** website [link removed]

[link removed]

Another Biden Financial Regulator Spins Through the Revolving Door [link removed]

Michael Hsu, former OCC head, has joined a VC firm backing crypto and fintech companies. [link removed]

BY DYLAN GYAUCH-LEWIS AND TONI AGUILAR ROSENTHAL [link removed]

[link removed]

Why Californians Will Pay $340 More for Electricity Next Year [link removed]

The state public utility commission is poised to approve a rate of return that critics say overcharges customers by $4.4 billion per year. [link removed]

BY DAVID DAYEN AND JAMES BARATTA [link removed]

[link removed]

Another Mass Staffing Purge at the VA [link removed]

Up to 37,000 positions may be dropped, with the VA transformed into a facilitator for outsourcing, sources tell the Prospect. [link removed]

BY SUZANNE GORDON AND RUSSELL LEMLE [link removed]

To receive this newsletter directly in your inbox, click here to subscribe. [link removed]

[link removed]

[link removed]

[link removed]

[link removed]

[link removed]

The American Prospect, Inc., 1225 I Street NW, Suite 600, Washington, DC xxxxxx, United States
Copyright (c) 2025 The American Prospect. All rights reserved.

To manage your newsletter preferences, use our preference management page [link removed].

To unsubscribe from all American Prospect emails, including newsletters, follow this link to unsubscribe [link removed].

Sent to: [email protected]

Unsubscribe [link removed]

The American Prospect, Inc., 1225 I Street NW, Suite 600, Washington, DC xxxxxx, United States
Screenshot of the email generated on import

Message Analysis