Regime
Change: Inside the Imperial Presidency of Donald Trump
by Maggie
Haberman (Author), Jonathan Swan (Author)
“Regime
Change is exceptional. It transcends its genre...the book is packed with news
that will stay news...This is reporting of consequence.” —David Remnick, The
New Yorker
“A
flabbergasting feat of political reporting.” —Tina Brown
“Riveting
and richly textured...What the authors add is the vivid detail that makes these
events feel actual. They wrest reality itself back from the distorted world of
entertainment, illusion, fantasy and denial that Trump has generated around
himself. It is this flood of provocation, atrocity, self-dealing and
fabrication that makes Haberman and Swan’s counternarrative so vital.” —Fintan
O’Toole, The New York Times
A
riveting, intimate, and revelatory account of the most radical and
consequential presidency of our time.
From the
two reporters who have covered him more closely than perhaps anyone else over
the past decade comes this definitive portrait of Donald Trump in the White
House. Regime Change covers the first year of Trump’s second presidency—a term
liberated from every constraint that defined his first. The generals who once
told him “no” are gone, and the lawyers who remain have learned to pick their
battles. His administration has flouted court orders and he has claimed powers
that Congress once checked. What remains is a President willing to take
enormous risks that have upended global markets and toppled heads of state; an
imperial President operating almost entirely on instinct alone.
Based on
hundreds of interviews and unprecedented reporting from deep within the
administration’s most closely guarded rooms, Regime Change takes the reader
inside the Situation Room and into the secret Oval Office deliberations that
have launched a new war in the Middle East and seen Trump seal the border,
surge National Guard troops into cities, and send immigration agents into
deadly clashes with protestors. Maggie Haberman and Jonathan Swan bring us
behind the scenes of a presidency that has transformed the culture, turned the
Justice Department into an agent of retribution against the President’s enemies
and the office itself into a brazen vehicle for profit. They reveal a second
term propelled by a historical irony that Trump himself has come to understand:
that the indictments, the convictions, the assassination attempts, and four
years of exile made him not weaker but far more powerful, more vengeful, and
more willing to gamble than any President in modern history.
This is
the story of how Trump has used that power, who has tried to stop him, and why
nearly all of them have failed. It is also the story of something American
journalists are more accustomed to chronicling in distant capitals than in
their own: a President who has fundamentally altered the nature of the office
he holds—and, with it, how the rest of the world understands American power. It
is an account of Regime Change right here in America—a landmark real-time
history of a modern presidency like no other.

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