Peter A. Hovis

The Morning: Trump’s revenge

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April 7, 2025

Good morning. Stocks in Asia and Europe plunged again after President Trump said tariffs would stay. U.S. markets are expected to drop. Benjamin Netanyahu is set to visit the White House. We also share a recap of “The White Lotus” season finale. (No spoilers here!)

More news is below. But first, our colleague explains the creative ways Trump is getting even with his opponents.

An image of Donald Trump in a red light
President Trump Eric Lee/The New York Times

The clapback

By Michael S. Schmidt

I’m an investigative reporter covering Washington.

When President Trump returned to office, his rivals feared he would seek revenge by using the Justice Department and the F.B.I. to investigate and even imprison his perceived enemies.

But the retribution effort is far more expansive, efficient and creative than that — and less reliant on the justice system. Trump has found new ways to use his power against foes. And his actions, or just the prospect of them, have led some of his antagonists to fall in line.

Trump has filed lawsuits, signed executive orders, drafted regulations, fired people from government jobs and withdrawn security details to battle those who he believes stood in his way. In many cases, rather than turning to the courts or federal agencies to carry out his demands, he has asserted unilateral executive power. His defenders say the Constitution should be interpreted to give a president centralized, untrammeled control of government.

Trump appears to hold a maximalist view of his powers even if they are disputed or untested. Can he deport people without due process, impound money allocated by Congress or remove appointees from independent agencies like the National Labor Relations Board? He is not waiting to find out. He has imposed costs on those who fail to heed his demands at universities, news organizations and executive agencies. Most recently, major law firms have buckled rather than endure punitive executive orders or fight in court. “They’re all bending and saying, ‘Sir, thank you very much,’” Trump said last recently.

In today’s newsletter I’ll look at some of the most prominent cases and explain his prospects for ultimate success.

A broad campaign

The administration has struck at perceived adversaries in many realms.

  • Attorneys general in blue states, lawyers and advocacy groups have filed many lawsuits to stop Trump’s policies. In the face of those challenges, Trump issued an order directing the Justice and Homeland Security Departments to “seek sanctions against attorneys and law firms who engage in frivolous, unreasonable and vexatious litigation against the United States.”
  • The law firm Paul Weiss is home to many former Democratic officials. Its managing partner is a major Democratic fund-raiser, and another partner prepared Kamala Harris for her debates. Trump barred it from dealing with the government and suggested that its clients could lose their government contracts. Despite believing that what Trump was doing to the firm was wrong and illegal, Paul Weiss made a deal with the Trump administration to reverse the order.
  • Many alumni of Trump’s first administration later spoke out against him in the 2024 election, including John Bolton, his national security adviser, and Mark Esper, his defense secretary. Both had security protection because, the government believed, Iran might target them for their roles in helping Trump kill a top Iranian general. Trump revoked their security protection. Defense Department officials also withdrew protection for Mark Milley, a former top military officer who worried Trump was staging a “Reichstag moment” during the Capitol riot, and removed Milley’s portrait from the Pentagon.
  • The Trump administration is investigating government lawyers who prosecuted Jan. 6 rioters — and will do the same for prosecutors who refused to dismiss corruption charges against Mayor Eric Adams of New York.
  • The White House blocked Associated Press reporters from the Oval Office and Air Force One because the wire service refuses to use “Gulf of America,” Trump’s preferred term for the Gulf of Mexico.
  • Trump sued an Iowa pollster who underestimated his support before the election. A Trump appointee has also announced an investigation into the San Francisco radio station KCBS for its coverage of immigration enforcement actions.
  • Facebook suspended Trump’s account after the Jan. 6 riot. During the campaign, Trump threatened to imprison the company’s founder. After he took office, Meta, the parent company, agreed to pay $25 million to settle a lawsuit on the matter.

Read a list of Trump’s other retributive actions here.

What next

In his first term, Trump tried to get the Justice Department, the F.B.I. and the I.R.S. to investigate his rivals. Many of them came under scrutiny, but he was furious that none were charged. When he tried to revoke a former C.I.A. director’s security clearance, for instance, his aides stopped him.

This time, with a more compliant staff, the only people holding him back are judges. Dozens of lawsuits have been filed (The Times is tracking them here), but it is impossible for courts to keep up. A good example came last month at a hearing about an executive order punishing the law firm Perkins Coie. The judge acted immediately with a temporary restraining order. But some of Perkins’s clients had already fled to other firms, and they are unlikely to return to lawyers blacklisted by the president. In other cases, Trump has said judges who rule against him should be impeached.

Claims of executive power follow a pattern, experts say. When one president finds a new and different way to flex it, the next ones follow suit. The next Democratic president, for instance, might decide to fire government lawyers affiliated with the conservative Federalist Society. He or she could end all government contracts with Elon Musk’s companies — or hold back emergency aid from red states that resist new climate regulations.

In the end, Trump’s actions may empower future presidents to use the executive branch as a cudgel of revenge.

I explain Trump’s campaign in this video.

THE LATEST NEWS

Trump Tariffs

In Seoul. Ahn Young-Joon/Associated Press
  • Stock markets in Asia and Europe plummeted this morning as investors become increasingly concerned about the impact of Trump’s tariffs. The U.S. is close to a bear market. Read more about the upheaval.
  • The markets were reacting to Trump’s comments to reporters on Air Force One yesterday that he would not reverse the tariffs until trade deficits with other countries disappeared.
  • Wall Street analysts spent the weekend assessing the damage of last week’s drops in the stock market.
  • The Fed isn’t rushing to save the markets. Jerome Powell, the Fed chair, said it was important to fully understand the effect of the tariffs before taking action.
  • One group is optimistic: Gulf Coast shrimpers. They have struggled to compete with cheaper imported shrimp for years.
  • China has tried to play down the impact of the trade war, presenting itself as too powerful to succumb to U.S. pressure.

Elon Musk

More on the Trump Administration

  • Trump’s comments about a third term both distract from his policies and underscore the threats to America’s constitution, Peter Baker writes.
  • Trump rejected a Biden administration plan that would have required Medicare and Medicaid to cover obesity drugs.
  • Cambodia’s authoritarian leader has silenced most of the nation’s independent media. A Trump directive threatens the few that remain.

Israel-Hamas War

  • Benjamin Netanyahu is traveling to Washington today to meet with Trump. They are expected to discuss tariffs and the war.
  • Two witnesses said they saw Israeli forces attack medics in Gaza, killing 15 people. See a video which appears to show soldiers opening fire on ambulances and a fire truck.
  • The video contradicts Israel’s initial version of events, and the military now says it was “mistaken.” Read more about the case.

War in Ukraine

In Istanbul. Emin Ozmen for The New York Times
  • Hundreds of thousands of Russians fled their country after the invasion of Ukraine. Many feared the draft, but they say even a cease-fire would not be enough to lure them home.
  • Ukraine has had success over Russia in the Black Sea. In the port city of Odesa, some wonder what Kyiv stands to gain from a truce with Moscow over the waters.

Other Big Stories

Pope Francis Alberto Pizzoli/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

Opinions

Trump intends to use tariffs to lower the value of the dollar, making U.S. exports more competitive with China, Jennifer Burns argues.

Gail Collins and Bret Stephens discuss education and Trump’s tariffs.

Here is a column by David French on due process.

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MORNING READS

A not-so-smart phone. Andria Lo for The New York Times

Brain rot: Can a dumber phone make you smarter?

A weird walk: Millions are flocking to the art collective Meow Wolf’s exhibitions. See inside.

The Great Read: For years, the father of Taffy Brodesser-Akner’s friend asked her to recount his childhood escape from the Nazis. She wrote the story she said she never would.

Metropolitan Diary: An apology to a dog.

Most clicked yesterday: Mass protests across the U.S. this weekend showed broad resistance to Trump.

Lives Lived: Marcia Marcus was a figurative and conceptual artist with a steely will and a bold contemporary style. She found fame in the 1960s and was then largely overlooked until she was nearly 90, though she kept working decade after decade. She died at 97.

SPORTS

Paige Bueckers Carmen Mandato/Getty Images

Women’s championship: Paige Bueckers and UConn secured a record 12th national title in a rout of the defending champion, South Carolina.

N.H.L.: Alex Ovechkin scored career goal No. 895, surpassing Wayne Gretzky to become No. 1 on the all-time list.

ARTS AND IDEAS

We’ll take a booth, please.  Phil Donohue

Casual dining chains like Pizza Hut, Chili’s, Olive Garden — places where middle-class families can walk in without a reservation and share a meal — have been in decline for most of the 21st century. The loss of these spaces, along with the rise of delivery apps, signals the fall of the middle-class restaurant.

More on culture

Aimee Lou Wood in “The White Lotus.” Fabio Lovino/HBO

THE MORNING RECOMMENDS …

David Malosh for The New York Times

Stir-fry shrimp and green beans for a quick recipe inspired by the flavors of chile crisp.

Start composting.

Take our news quiz.

GAMES

Here is today’s Spelling Bee. Yesterday’s pangrams were hotline and neolith.

And here are today’s Mini Crossword, Wordle, Connections, Sports Connections, Sports Connections and Strands.

Thanks for spending part of your morning with The Times. See you tomorrow.

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