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Wednesday, February 04, 2026

Opinion | Common Ground Is for Suckers - The New York Times

Common Ground Is for Suckers

President Trump looking at an angle at unseen members of the media.
Saul Loeb/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

"Donald Trump is president of a United States, but it is too much to say that he is president of the United States.

A hallmark of the president’s language since he stepped onto the national political stage is that some Americans are just a little more American than others, and that this is a function of race, nationality and, above all, allegiance to Trump.

Trump deployed this idea against Barack Obama when he questioned the former president’s political legitimacy and demanded that he prove his citizenship with the public release of his “long-form” birth certificate. He wielded it during his first campaign for the White House, dismissing critics and opponents as un-American and illegitimate on the basis of their race, nationality and partisan identity. Recall his condemnation of Judge Gonzalo Curiel, who, Trump insisted, could not be impartial because he was “Mexican.” And this vision of the supposedly true American public was a rhetorical mainstay of his first term in office. “The Democrats,” Trump said, in a typical formulation during a 2018 rally for Senator Ted Cruz of Texas, “have launched an assault on the sovereignty of our country.”

Now, obviously, Trump did not pioneer this distinction between the people who happen to live in a nation and the quasi-mystical, fully legitimate People of the Nation. This construct is a mainstay of right-wing populism. You saw it in the 2008 presidential election, when Gov. Sarah Palin of Alaska told audiences that there was a “real” America that truly represented the country. “We believe that the best of America is in these small towns that we get to visit, and in these wonderful little pockets of what I call the real America, being here with all of you hardworking, very patriotic, pro-America areas of this great nation,” she said.

You saw it at the 1992 Republican National Convention, when Pat Buchanan, the Nixon speechwriter and political operative turned conservative intellectual and proto-Trumpian provocateur, deployed this herrenvolk notion of the American nation in his infamous (and influential) jeremiad against American liberalism.

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“There is a religious war going on in this country. It is a cultural war, as critical to the kind of nation we shall be as was the Cold War itself, for this war is for the soul of America,” Buchanan declared. “We must take back our cities, and take back our culture, and take back our country.” And you cannot understand the nativist “Americanism” of the second Ku Klux Klan of the 1910s and ’20s without reference to a similarly narrow conception of the American people, one tied to sharp anxieties around race, class, religion and masculinity. The Klan “stood for patriotism, ‘old-time religion’ and conventional morality, and pledged to fend off challenges from any quarter to the rights and privileges of men from the stock of the nation’s founders,” the historian Nancy MacLean explains in “Behind the Mask of Chivalry: The Making of the Second Ku Klux Klan.”

What Trump has done is turn this rhetorical distinction into something like the governing philosophy of the federal government. To start, the White House has made clear that a state’s access to either federal aid or federal benefits is a function of its partisan allegiance. During last year’s government shutdown, for example, the administration canceled $8 billion in federal funding for clean energy, affecting 16 states — all of which voted for Kamala Harris in the 2024 presidential election. Trump also withheld billions for transit projects in New York and New Jersey. “We can get rid of a lot of things that we didn’t want,” the president said, commenting on what he thought was the upside of a shutdown, “and they’d be Democrat things.”

It is similarly clear that the president slated the worst of his deportation program for Democratic-led states and cities. Neither Chicago nor Los Angeles nor Washington stands out as particularly dangerous compared with the typical major American city. And if Trump were only targeting undocumented immigrants, he could look to cities in Texas and Florida as well as those in California and Illinois. But Trump targeted them all the same, sending the National Guard to occupy each city and unleashing federal immigration agents to harass and abuse immigrants and citizens alike.

“I love the smell of deportations in the morning,” Trump mused on his Truth Social website in September. “Chicago about to find out why it’s called the Department of WAR.” The administration’s attack on Minnesota, and especially on the city of Minneapolis, is more of the same, less law enforcement than a combat operation aimed at a set of Americans whose governor opposed the president in the last election or who belong to a disfavored racial, ethnic and religious minority

At the risk of cliché, most presidents do not speak like this about their fellow Americans. The presidency is a national office, and even the bitterest struggles for this highest prize of American politics tend to end with an appeal to union and common ground from the eventual winner. “We are all Republicans, we are all Federalists,” Thomas Jefferson proclaimed in the wake of an election so hard fought that it nearly turned to violence. “Let us, then, with courage and confidence pursue our own federal and republican principles, our attachment to union and representative government.”

John Quincy Adams won the presidency in what his chief rival, Andrew Jackson, condemned as a “corrupt bargain.” In his Inaugural Address, Adams made it a point to reach out to those Americans who wanted a different man in the White House. “Of the two great political parties which have divided the opinions and feelings of our country,” Adams said, “the candid and the just will now admit that both have contributed splendid talents, spotless integrity, ardent patriotism, and disinterested sacrifices to the formation and administration of this Government, and that both have required a liberal indulgence for a portion of human infirmity and error.”

Abraham Lincoln ended his first Inaugural Address with a famous appeal to the common history that tied Americans to one another. “We are not enemies, but friends. We must not be enemies,” he said. “Though passion may have strained it must not break our bonds of affection.” Lincoln’s heartfelt call to his Southern brethren to heed “the mystic chords of memory” fell on deaf ears. Five weeks later, a South Carolina militia fired on Fort Sumter. Not long afterward, Union volunteers met soldiers from the newly formed Confederate States of America in a field just north of Manassas, Va. And so began four years of the worst bloodletting in American history.

Trump rejects this legacy of his predecessors. The rhetorical tools of the presidency are, for him, a means to divide Americans and sort them according to hierarchies of status. Trump sits atop the national government, but not as a national leader. His is the logic of the separatist, even of the secessionist. “There was no privilege without persecution, no winner without a loser,” Michael J. Lee and R. Jarrod Atchison write of the ideology of the Southern “fire-eaters” in “We Are Not One People: Secession and Separatism in American Politics Since 1776.” In their worldview, “political relationships within nations were always hierarchical; some group was always enslaved by or beholden to some other more dominant group.”

The fire-eaters hoped to instantiate this vision in a new nation founded on a cornerstone of racial subjugation. But what if you could secede without secession? What if you could cleave the nation off from its egalitarian aspirations? What if you could bring the spirit of separatism to bear on a government tasked with representing a single people?

That is the Trump administration. That is the work of a White House that sees vast numbers of Americans not as friends, but as enemies. And that is a work of a president who will destroy as many symbols of national unity as he can to satisfy his bottomless ego, cruel appetites and unquenchable desire to “win” at the expense of the people he purports to lead.

Jamelle Bouie became a New York Times Opinion columnist in 2019. Before that he was the chief political correspondent for Slate magazine. He is based in Charlottesville, Va."

Opinion | Common Ground Is for Suckers - The New York Times

Cancer Surgery and the Pain I Didn’t Want to Face - The New York Times

A Cancer Surgery and the Pain I Didn’t Want to Face

(I know this feeling well.)

"A shocking diagnosis led a writer to focus on the dispassionate medical details, until his body jolted him into confronting what he hadn’t.

An illustration of a figure walking a dog on the shoreline of a stormy ocean. A large pair of closed eyes hovers in the sky above.
Kerstin Wichmann

By Ethan Hauser

Ethan Hauser is an editor on the Culture desk at The Times.

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On Memorial Day, I was in the office covering for colleagues on vacation when my phone rang. I had gotten a CT scan that morning, and the radiologist was calling to tell me I had renal cell carcinoma — kidney cancer.

I did not know how to react, so I did what I am trained to do: listen and write.

I asked the radiologist a few questions, bizarrely apologizing for them. I don’t know how long the conversation lasted. Fifteen minutes? 30? Longer than either of us wanted, probably. That’s what she gets for calling a journalist.

Afterward, I looked at the notes I had taken, waiting for them to make sense or fade into nothingness as if they had never happened. I thought maybe they could be like movie credits and just dissolve.

They didn’t, so I called the radiologist back, explaining that it was such jarring information that I wanted to be sure I understood.

I am good at absorbing and writing about bad news as long as it’s happening to other people. A few years ago, I edited coverage of the coronavirus pandemic. There were scant pauses in the fright and suffering, and if I’d flinched at every outbreak and all the reports of mass death, making it through a single shift would have been impossible.

That second call, though, was akin to magical thinking. I wanted the radiologist to say: “That is not what I said at all. I have no idea how you heard that.” Or: “I mixed up your scan with another patient’s. I’m sorry for scaring you.”

Instead, she just repeated herself: “You have kidney cancer.” Then she added, “You need to talk to a surgeon as soon as possible.”

Before all this, I was in very good health. I’m 55, and my weight had barely fluctuated for 30 or so years. I ran intermittently, hiked and went to the gym. The only problems I’d had were an intransigent insomnia, blood pressure that could have been a little lower and some minor gastrointestinal symptoms (hence the CT scan).

Kidney tumors, I would learn, are often caught this way — “incidentally,” the doctors call it, showing up on tests ordered for other symptoms. Two days after the radiologist’s diagnosis, I spoke with the first of several urologic surgeons. He said I most likely had Stage 3 kidney cancer and needed a radical nephrectomy: complete removal of the kidney. It wouldn’t have to be replaced; my remaining kidney would then handle the work of two.

He noted that the surgery was serious but routine. Think of all the people who donate kidneys, he said. The editor in me quibbled with the word “routine,” but I didn’t say anything. I was far more invested in the precision of his hands than in the precision of his language.

About a month later, my wife and I took an Uber from Queens to the Upper East Side at 5 a.m. I don’t think we spoke much, just took in the violet sky and the transforming hour, when people are up for honest reasons: collecting garbage, squeegeeing storefronts, brewing coffee. We drove over the Queensboro Bridge, the East River below us calm, and I was jealous of everything and everyone.

The three nights I spent in the hospital were a blur of nurses and doctors, of IVs and their blips and blurps, of vital signs checked and blood being drawn. I had an eight-inch incision, sternum to pelvis, cinched by hidden intramuscular stitches and by metal staples, very much not hidden. It looked as if a kid had gone to town on my torso with a staple gun.

Before the surgery, I had approached everything with emotional distance: reading up on the details of the procedure, emailing physician friends of friends.

Little could pierce this impassive approach — not even the nurse who, a week before I was admitted, paused her paperwork, looked straight into my eyes and said, “I just want to tell you, this is a notoriously painful surgery to recover from.”

More magical thinking: She must be confusing me with another patient.

At the hospital, post-surgery, the fentanyl did its job. My doctors taught me to clutch a pillow to my abdomen if I needed to sneeze or cough or laugh — about what, I wondered? — to minimize the pressure on the incision.

The unbearable pain came when I went home.

There was no secret escape route. I woke up with it and went to bed with it, with brief respites when the prescription painkillers reached their peak. Even the name “painkillers” seemed like a tease and a lie. “Get ahead of the pain,” the doctors and nurses say at discharge, which sounds logical, until you try.

Those first few weeks at home remain a fog. I suspect that’s normal: Pain makes you turn inward. I sometimes looked at the incision and touched the staples, gingerly, wondering if they would hold and what would happen if they did not.

I desperately wanted to believe my doctors and nurses, who claimed that this much anxiety and pain were all normal. But my trust in my body — maybe my trust in everything — had been shattered. I texted them daily photos of the incision, because they needed to monitor any signs of infection and because I craved reassurance that I was healing.

One of the worst parts of a cancer diagnosis is that surgery can be only one piece; you’re often healing toward the possibility of more pain: invasive procedures, radiation, chemotherapy.

In some ways, I am lucky: My infusions are a less-toxic immunotherapy drug, which I seem to be tolerating well. In other ways, though, I am unlucky — for men who are cancer-free at age 50, there is a 0.7 percent chance of developing kidney or renal pelvis cancer before the age of 65, according to the American Cancer Society.

The pain gradually eased, though it was hard to notice. Small tasks became doable. I made myself meals. I resumed some late-night dog walks, and she appeared to forgive my absence — though I think she holds a grudge. Slowly I faced the shame of unanswered texts and piled-up voice mail messages. My wife had gamely become communications director, a role she could now shed.

I’m still surprised, all these months later, at the gulf between the sophistication of modern medicine and the violence it can do to your body, even while saving a life. Ahead of the surgery, I marveled at the machines and peppered surgeons with questions that were mostly technical, even insignificant. But I never asked them how I would feel.

At least one person warned me — the nurse — though I rejected it. Preparing a body for surgery is a mix of holiness and desecration. There are washes, fasts, robes, hands on you. In the lead-up, I chose, maybe not even consciously, the holy. Then the scalpel met flesh, and all that I’d ignored flooded the room.

People often use the word “blinding” for colossal pain. I don’t think it’s just some linguistic trope. Pain is the opposite of what I saw and felt as we drove to the hospital on that cloudless morning. The light, brightening minute by minute — that was now unimaginable. I didn’t know then how sweeping the pain could be: how it ran not just along my body, but that it could seize my mind, too.

I would close my eyes during the most intense spells, thinking peace might come with darkness. What I saw, though, wasn’t comforting. There were vague, formless images skittering across the inside of my eyelids. They’d disappear, giving way to a gray abstraction, wide and churning as the ocean.

But there wasn’t water, and there was no horizon line. There was nothing but an ungiving seam where the sea refused to meet the sky."

Cancer Surgery and the Pain I Didn’t Want to Face - The New York Times

Fulton County in Georgia Challenges the F.B.I.’s Seizure of 2020 Ballots - The New York Times

Fulton County in Georgia Challenges the F.B.I.’s Seizure of 2020 Ballots

"The county filed a motion demanding the return of ballots and other election materials that were seized by the F.B.I. in a highly unusual move by the Trump administration.

An F.B.I. agent walking into an election center in Fulton County, Ga., last week.
F.B.I. agents searched an election center in Fulton County, Ga., last week and seized ballots and other election materials.Nicole Craine for The New York Times

Fulton County in Georgia took legal action on Wednesday demanding that the federal government return ballots and other election materials from the 2020 presidential contest that the F.B.I. seized last week.

The motion was filed under seal in federal court in Georgia, according to Jessica Corbitt, a spokeswoman for Fulton County. The motion also seeks the unsealing of the affidavit that was filed in support of the search warrant that allowed F.B.I. agents to conduct an extraordinary search of the county’s election headquarters.

At a news conference on Wednesday morning, Robb Pitts, the chair of the Fulton County Board of Commissioners, cast the legal action as a means of upholding the Constitution, as well as the rights of Fulton County voters. 

“We will fight using all resources against those who seek to take over our elections,” he said. “Our Constitution itself is at stake in this fight.”

The move follows a chaotic week in Fulton County, which includes much of Atlanta and is Georgia’s most populous county, after F.B.I. agents conducted an extraordinary search and took away pallets of ballots and other materials.

Local officials were particularly alarmed and confused by the presence of Tulsi Gabbard, the director of national intelligence, whose agency’s involvement in elections traditionally pertains only to foreign influence. The day after the search, she met with some of the agents who had participated and called Mr. Trump on her cellphone, The New York Times reported on Monday. After initially not picking up, he called back and spoke to them on speakerphone, asking them questions and praising and thanking them, according to three people with knowledge of the meeting.

Mr. Trump has continued to argue falsely that his 2020 election defeat was rigged, and members of his administration have made apparent efforts to search for evidence of widespread fraud in that year’s contest even though none has ever been found.

In a podcast interview released on Monday, Mr. Trump said that he wanted the Republican Party to “nationalize” voting in the United States, an aggressive rhetorical step that signaled a desire to involve his administration in election matters. During the interview with Dan Bongino, his former deputy F.B.I. director and a podcaster, Mr. Trump also called for Republican officials to “take over” voting procedures in 15 states, though he did not name them.

On Tuesday, Mr. Trump doubled down on his call to nationalize voting even as the White House and top Republicans tried to walk it back.

Democrats, election officials and voting rights experts have expressed worries about the developments and warned that the Trump administration might be laying the groundwork to intervene or cast doubt on this year’s midterm elections. The Constitution grants states the power to run elections, and Congress the ability to pass federal election laws, but the executive branch has no explicit authority over elections.

The scene in Fulton County last week, on a cold, cloudless, late Wednesday afternoon, was strange and tense. Legal observers from the American Civil Liberties Union stood around near the entrance, which was mobbed with reporters and news cameras. The news media was not allowed into the building, while government officials and F.B.I. agents came and went.

Three white box trucks were parked at a back entrance as evidence was rolled out. Officials in Fulton County said that more than 20 pallets of ballots, election tape and equipment had been seized, though they do not have a full inventory from the Justice Department.

“We don’t even have copies of what they took, so it’s a problem,” Mr. Pitts said at the news conference on Wednesday. He said the county wanted the documents back “so we can take an inventory” of what documents and materials were taken.

“We don’t know where they are. We don’t know really, who has them,” he said. We don’t know what they’re doing with them. Are they being tampered with? I can use my imagination, and I would certainly hope not. But we just — we don’t know.”

He noted that Mr. Trump, in his comments about nationalizing elections, suggested that Republicans should “take over” the elections process “in at least many — 15 places.”

Mr. Pitts said Fulton was the “epicenter” of this fight. “We’ll be the test case,” he said. “If they’re successful in Georgia — Fulton County, Georgia in particular — the others on that list of 15 plus states, they should be aware.”

The Fulton County search, he said, was “probably the first step in whatever they’re going to do in order to depress voter participation, voter registration, making whatever changes they think are necessary to help their case in 2026, but more importantly, in 2028.”

Nick Corasaniti is a Times reporter covering national politics, with a focus on voting and elections.

Richard Fausset, a Times reporter based in Atlanta, writes about the American South, focusing on politics, culture, race, poverty and criminal justice."

Fulton County in Georgia Challenges the F.B.I.’s Seizure of 2020 Ballots - The New York Times

Trump’s Call to ‘Nationalize’ Elections Adds to State Officials’ Alarm - The New York Times

Trump’s Call to ‘Nationalize’ Elections Adds to State Officials’ Alarm

"Some top state election officials, who run voting across the country, worry that the federal government has become hostile to them and their work.

Shenna Bellows is speaking into three microphones at a lectern.
Some Democratic state election officials, including Shenna Bellows, secretary of state in Maine, have spoken out about President Trump’s efforts to involve the administration in election and voting matters.Sophie Park for The New York Times

President Trump’s declaration that he wants to “nationalize” voting in the United Statesarrives at a perilous moment for the relationship between the federal government and top election officials across the country.

While the executive branch has no explicit authority over elections, generations of secretaries of state have relied on the intelligence gathering and cybersecurity defenses, among other assistance, that only the federal government can provide.

But as Mr. Trump has escalated efforts to involve the administration in election and voting matters while also eliminating programs designed to fortify these systems against attacks, secretaries of state and other top state election officials, including some Republican ones, have begun to sound alarms. Some see what was once a crucial partnership as frayed beyond repair.

They point to Mr. Trump’s push to overturn the 2020 election, his continued false claims that the contest was rigged, the presence of election deniers in influential government positions and his administration’s attempts to dig up evidence of widespread voter fraud that year, even though none have ever been found.

The worry, these election officials say, is that Mr. Trump and his allies might try to interfere in or cast doubt on this year’s midterm elections. The president is urgently trying to defend the Republican majorities in Congress, and the political environment has appeared to grow less friendly to his party.

On Tuesday, a day after Mr. Trump’s comments about wanting to “nationalize” elections, Karoline Leavitt, the White House press secretary, said the president was referring to federal election legislation in Congress. Yet after Ms. Leavitt’s attempt to clarify Mr. Trump’s initial remarks, he doubled down on his assertion that the federal government should oversee state elections.

“Look at some of the places — that horrible corruption on elections — and the federal government should not allow that,” he said. “The federal government should get involved.”

Even before Mr. Trump’s latest remarks, state officials had pointed to other evidence of his aims regarding elections.

The F.B.I. seized ballots and other 2020 voting records last week from an election office in Fulton County, Ga., which on Wednesday challenged the seizure in court. The Justice Department has sued nearly half of the states in the country to try to obtain their full voter rolls with Americans’ personal information in an effort to build a national voter database.

Attorney General Pam Bondi sent a threatening letter to Democratic officials in one of those states, Minnesota, suggesting that the administration might wind down its immigration enforcement efforts there in exchange for concessions, including handing over its voter data.

The New York Times also reported that Tulsi Gabbard, the director of national intelligence, met with F.B.I. field agents the day after the Fulton County search and called Mr. Trump, allowing the president to talk on speakerphone with agents involved in the investigation.

“We can’t trust the federal government, and they are now adversaries of the states,” Shenna Bellows, the Democratic secretary of state in Maine and who is a candidate for governor, said in an interview. “They are abusing their power by trying to build this national voter database that is completely outside of the scope of their authority under the Constitution, and they’re afraid to actually engage in dialogue.”

The tensions are a sharp shift for election officials in the states — which the Constitution dictates are in charge of carrying out elections — after decades of close alliance with the federal government.

These officials — who are much more accustomed to policy nuance and procedural debate than the raw politics of the Trump era — bristle at the administration’s insinuations that they are doing a poor job and are not securing the country’s elections.

“The things that have been said publicly, frankly, are quite appalling,” Lt. Gov. Deidre Henderson, Republican of Utah, said last week at the National Association of Secretaries of State conference in Washington. She was speaking during a question-and-answer session with Jared Borg, a deputy director at the White House Office of Intergovernmental Affairs.

Ms. Henderson, who oversees Utah’s elections, called out Ms. Bondi in particular and the Justice Department’s efforts to push states to hand over their voter rolls.

“She’s pretty much slandered all of us,” Ms. Henderson said. “And to me, that’s problematic to publicly claim that secretaries of state are not doing our jobs and the federal government has to do it for us. Not OK.”

In a statement, Michael Adams, the Republican secretary of state in Kentucky, pointed to the Constitution as clearly delineating authority over elections to the state.

“President Reagan famously noted that ‘the federal government did not create the states; the states created the federal government,’” Mr. Adams said. He also criticized efforts by Democrats under President Joseph R. Biden Jr. to set up nationwide mail-in voting through Congress, and said he was grateful to Mr. Trump for helping the state buy new machines during his first term. “I’m optimistic for a similar partnership in his second term,” he added.

Some Republican secretaries of state, however, have completely embraced the president’s actions and rhetoric regarding elections.

“I stand with the Trump administration and President Trump for his great work on election integrity,” Chuck Gray, the Republican secretary of state in Wyoming, said during an interview session with reporters at the conference last week. He ran through a litany of administration programs he supports, including the push to use federal databases and the might of the Justice Department to force changes to state voter rolls. “Voter lists should contain only qualified electors,” he said. “This is common sense.”

The presence in Fulton County this week of Ms. Gabbard, whose agency’s authority over U.S. elections is limited to investigating international interference, particularly worried some election officials. They noted that Ms. Gabbard had no experience working on the mechanics of elections.

“It is an absolute travesty and a waste of taxpayer dollars that she is chasing down some boogey monster, some phantom, some fiction from six years ago,” Sarah Copeland Hanzas, the Democratic secretary of state in Vermont, said in an interview. 

On Monday, Ms. Gabbard wrote a letter to members of Congress, noting that her presence in Fulton County was requested by the president and that her office has “broad statutory authority to coordinate, integrate and analyze intelligence related to election security.”

Election officials have also expressed worries about Mr. Trump’s attempts to alter election policy through executive orders. In March, he signed an executive order to make sweeping changes to the electoral process, but it was knocked down in court. Since then, he has said on social media that he wants to end mail-in voting, even though he does not have the power to unilaterally change voting laws.

Some state election officials have said they feel abandoned by the federal government in other ways. Information-sharing programs housed within the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency were shut last year, with little to no replacement. Without those programs, some election officials worry they could be blind to potential cyberattacks.

In a separate question-and-answer session at the election conference last week, Ms. Bellows, the Maine secretary of state, noted that there was no federal situation room on Election Day last year “for the first time in a long time.”

“We were getting reports about bomb threats in New Jersey from public media, rather than the Sit Room, as would have happened in the past,” Ms. Bellows said.

The lack of support in critical areas, coupled with the pressure from the Justice Department and the Department of Homeland Security, encapsulates a shift in tone, said Stephanie Thomas, the Democratic secretary of state from Connecticut.

“Since last year, I would say that it feels like the approach is using a sledgehammer when a conversation might suffice,” she said.

Nick Corasaniti is a Times reporter covering national politics, with a focus on voting and elections."

Trump’s Call to ‘Nationalize’ Elections Adds to State Officials’ Alarm - The New York Times

Panicked by bad news, Trump makes ELECTIONS POWER GRAB and leaves staff ...

Tuesday, February 03, 2026

Newly released Jeffrey Epstein files: 10 key takeaways so far | Jeffrey Epstein | The Guardian

Newly released Jeffrey Epstein files: 10 key takeaways so far:



  1. "1. Epstein lawyers discussed possibility of cooperation days before his death

    Less than two weeks before Epstein died in jail in 2019, the files show that his attorneys met with Manhattan federal prosecutors and discussed Epstein’s potential cooperation.

    An FBI document titled “Epstein Investigation Summary & Timeline” states: “On July 29, 2019, FBI and [prosecutors] met with Epstein’s attorneys, who, in very general terms, discussed the possibility of a resolution of the case, and the possibility of the defendant’s cooperation.”

    Another document titled “Jeffrey Epstein Significant Case Notification”, which closely resembles the FBI memo but is not attributed to a specific agency, notes that “defense counsel did not make a specific proposal, and they did not indicate what the nature of Epstein’s cooperation might be, if any.

    “It was suggested that defense counsel contact SDNY [southern district of New York] if Epstein was prepared to accept responsibility for his conduct and/or they had a specific proposal for a resolution of this case,” it added.


  2. 2. FBI received allegations about Trump

    One document in the newly released tranche is a summary that FBI officials appear to have compiled last summer, of more than a dozen tips received by the agency involving Trump and Epstein.

    It is unclear why the investigators put together the summary, and it does not say when the tips, which include unsubstantiated claims of sexual abuse, were received. The document also does not include any corroborating evidence or indication that the tips were verified.

    Trump has repeatedly denied any wrongdoing in connection with Epstein. In response to a request for comment from the New York Times, the White House referred to a statement from the justice department on Friday, which stated that the new tranche of documents “may include fake or falsely submitted images, documents or videos”.

    “Some of the documents contain untrue and sensationalist claims against President Trump that were submitted to the FBI right before the 2020 election,” the justice department statement added. “To be clear, the claims are unfounded and false, and if they have a shred of credibility, they certainly would have been weaponized against President Trump already.”


  3. 3. Musk had more extensive ties to Epstein than previously known

    Emails show Musk and Epstein exchanging cordial messages, and on two separate occasions, in 2012 and 2013, the two making plans for Musk to visit Epstein’s private island. The communications suggest that the trips did not occur due to logistical issues.

    Musk told Vanity Fair in 2019 that Epstein was “obviously a creep” and claimed that Epstein “tried repeatedly to get me to visit his island” but that he had “declined”.

    A representative for Musk and his artificial intelligence company, xAI, did not return a request for comment about the emails. On Friday night, Musk repeated his previousclaim on social media, and stated that he had “very little correspondence with Epstein and declined repeated invitations to go to his island”.


  4. 4. Howard Lutnick made plans to visit Epstein’s island

    The files show that Lutnick, now serving as US secretary of commerce under Trump, arranged to visit Jeffrey Epstein’s island in 2012.

    Last year Lutnick said in an interview that he had been neighbors with Epstein in New York, and that he had cut ties with Epstein around 2005, calling him “disgusting”.

    A spokesperson for the commerce department told the Wall Street Journal that Lutnick had limited interactions with Epstein and had never been accused of wrongdoing.


  5. 5. Mountbatten-Windsor invited Epstein to Buckingham Palace

    Emails suggest that Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor invited Epstein to Buckingham Palace following Epstein’s release from house arrest in 2010.

    In 2008, as part of a negotiated deal, Epstein pleaded guilty to state charges in Florida of solicitation of prostitution and solicitation of prostitution with a minor, and served 13 months of an 18-month sentence. He was released in July 2009, and began serving a house arrest sentence, which ended in August 2010.

    In a September 2010 email exchange between Epstein and “the Duke” – believed to be Mountbatten-Windsor, then the Duke of York – Epstein said he was in London and requested “private time”.

    Mountbatten-Windsor appears to have replied: “We could have dinner at Buckingham Palace and lots of privacy.” Two days later, he followed up by saying: “Delighted for you to come here to BP [Buckingham Palace]. Come with whomever and I’ll be here free from 1600ish.”

    It is unclear if the meeting took place. But three months later, the pair were pictured walking together in New York’s Central Park. Mountbatten-Windsor has previously claimed he had travelled to the US to end his friendship with Epstein in light of his conviction.

    The documents also show that days after Epstein’s house arrest ended, Epstein offered to arrange for Mountbatten-Windsor to have dinner with a “clevere [sic], beautiful and trustworthy” 26-year-old Russian woman. Mountbatten-Windsor apparently responded that he would be “delighted” to meet the woman. In that email exchange, he also asked Epstein if it was “good to be free?”

    Additional files include photos showing Andrew appearing to be crouching over an unidentified woman who is lying on the floor.


  6. 6. Richard Branson and Epstein exchanged emails

    The files show an email exchange from 2013 between Branson, the British billionaire and founder of the Virgin Group, and Epstein.

    In an email on 11 September 2013, Branson wrote to Epstein, “It was really nice seeing you yesterday” and added: “Any time you’re in the area would love to see you. As long as you bring your harem!”

    A representative for Virgin group told the Guardian that Branson had sent the email shortly after hosting Epstein at a group business meeting on the private island Branson owns in the British Virgin Islands.

    The spokesperson said that Epstein arrived at the meeting with three adult women, who the spokesperson said Epstein referred to as his “harem”, who did not attend the meeting.

    “Any contact Richard and Joan Branson had with Epstein took place on only a few occasions more than 12 years ago, and was limited to group or business settings, such as a charity tennis event,” the representative said in a statement to the Guardian over the weekend.

    “Richard believes that Epstein’s actions were abhorrent and supports the right to justice for his many victims,” the statement added.


  7. 7. Files show emails between head of LA Olympics committee and Ghislaine Maxwell

    Emails from 2003 between Casey Wasserman, head of the Los Angeles Olympics organizing committee, and Ghislaine Maxwell – who is serving a 20-year prison sentence for sex-trafficking crimes – appeared in the files.

    The exchanges include a message from Wasserman telling Maxwell: “I think of you all the time. So, what do I have to do to see you in a tight leather outfit?”

    In an April 2003 email, sent to Wasserman, who was married at the time, Maxwell offered to give him a massage that can “drive a man wild”.

    Wasserman said on Saturday he “deeply regrets” his “correspondence with Ghislaine Maxwell,” which he said took place “long before her horrific crimes came to light”.

    “I never had a personal or business relationship with Jeffrey Epstein,” he added. “As is well documented, I went on a humanitarian trip as part of a delegation with the Clinton Foundation in 2002 on the Epstein plane. I am terribly sorry for having any association with either of them.”


  8. 8. New York Giants co-owner Steve Tisch exchanged emails with Epstein

    Tisch was mentioned several hundred times in files released on Friday, and in some emails exchanges from 2013 it appears that Epstein connected Tisch to several women.

    In a statement, Tisch said that he and Epstein had “a brief association where we exchanged emails about adult women, and in addition we discussed movies, philanthropy and investments”.

    “I did not take him up on any of his invitations and never went to his island,” he added. “As we all know now, he was a terrible person and someone I deeply regret associating with.”


  9. 9. Files shed new light on relationship between Epstein and Peter Mandelson

    Bank records appear to show three separate payments of $25,000 from Epstein’s JP Morgan bank accounts referencing Mandelson, and separate documents appear to indicate that Epstein sent thousands of pounds to Mandelson’s husband after Epstein’s release from prison in 2009.

    Contacted about the bank statements, Mandelson said: “I have no record and no recollection of receiving these sums and do not know if the documents are authentic.”

    The files also include an image of Mandelson in his underwear standing next to a woman whose face is redacted. In response, Mandelson has said that he “cannot place the location or the woman and I cannot think what the circumstances were”.

    Mandelson was fired in September over his links to Epstein. On Sunday, he resignedfrom the Labour party.

    In a statement, Mandelson reiterated that he had been wrong to believe Epstein and continue his association with him, adding: “I deeply regret doing so and apologise unequivocally to the women and girls who suffered.”


  10. 10. Hollywood film-maker Brett Ratner appears in image with Epstein and two women

    A newly released photo from the files shows Ratner, who directed the recently released Melania Trump documentary, sitting on a sofa hugging a woman, next to Epstein, who is sitting with another woman. Both women’s faces have been redacted.

    According to the Wall Street Journal, the undated photo appears to have been taken in Epstein’s New York townhouse.

    Ratner reportedly told the Journal in 2023 he did not know Epstein and had never met him. On Saturday, a spokeswoman for Ratner declined to comment to the Journal."

Newly released Jeffrey Epstein files: 10 key takeaways so far | Jeffrey Epstein | The Guardian