Opinion
The
Conversation
Donald
Trump, Live From Davos
Jan. 22,
2026, 5:04 a.m. ET
https://www.nytimes.com/2026/01/22/opinion/trump-davos-greenland-minnesota.html
Frank
Bruni Bret
Stephens
By Frank
Bruni and Bret Stephens
Mr. Bruni
is a contributing Opinion writer. Mr. Stephens is an Opinion columnist.
Frank
Bruni: Welcome, Bret, to the second year of Donald Trump’s second residency in
the White House. You and he are both marking the occasion in Davos. What’s it
like this time around — to be an American in a Europe that he’s doing his
demented best to turn from ally to enemy? Must be a chill in the air that has
nothing to do with the Alps and the altitude.
Bret
Stephens: Regards from the Magic Mountain, Frank. The mother of a friend of
mine used to carry around a stack of business cards that read, “I apologize for
my husband’s behavior on the evening of__________.” She meant it as a gag. But
I think the Americans here in Davos could seriously use something like that: “I
apologize for our president’s craziness on the morning/afternoon/night
of___________.” Maybe it’ll help convince our European friends that we haven’t
all lost our minds.
Frank:
How hopeful of you — and how quaint — to cling to the phrase “our European
friends.”
Bret:
Unlike members of the Trump administration — who are here in force, by the way,
from the president to the secretaries of state, Treasury, commerce, energy, to,
of course, Kellyanne Conway — Europeans aren’t reducing every American to a
political caricature.
Frank:
It’s so fascinating and so revealing that Trump and his accomplices are there
in droves. Like schoolyard bullies, they’re most desperate for respect from the
people they pretend to have contempt for. They playact superiority to
camouflage their insecurity. They can blather all they like about the rationale
for insisting on the acquisition of Greenland, but what’s really driving Trump
is his compulsion to prove to the world just how big and bold he is. Which, of
course, shows how small and sad he is.
Bret:
I’ll leave it to our readers to psychoanalyze the president’s compulsion to
demonstrate, uh, bigness.
Frank: I
suspect that many of our readers will enjoy that, but I’ll remind them that
we’re a family newspaper.
Bret:
Putting Dr. Freud to one side, it’s striking how clearheadedly and defiantly
Europeans are reacting — like a spouse who didn’t want the divorce, but is
willing and ready to move on with life. Ursula von der Leyen, the European
Commission’s formidable president, gave a speech Tuesday worthy of the Ivana
Trump memoir: “The Best Is Yet to Come.” Though, come to think of it, I hope
Europe’s future is a bit brighter than the first Mrs. Trump’s.
Frank:
Not just from von der Leyen, but from many world leaders in Davos, we’ve heard
statements so extraordinary we really must memorialize them. From the Belgian
prime minister, Bart De Wever: “Being a happy vassal is one thing. Being a
miserable slave is something else.” Trump is the feudal lord in that framing.
From the Canadian prime minister, Mark Carney: There’s a “breaking of the world
order.” Trump is the sledgehammer.
Bret: And
then there was Trump’s speech, for which I was in the audience. It was like a
geopolitical version of a Mafia shakedown. “You can say yes and we will be very
appreciative, or you can say no and we will remember.” That was Trump’s message
to Denmark on the subject of ceding Greenland. It was like watching a scene
from “The Sopranos.”
Frank:
Only if someone drained “The Sopranos” of all energy and focus. I know that
Trump had a rough, interrupted flight to Davos. I’m sure he didn’t get enough
sleep. But even factoring all of that in, we should be unsettled by what we saw
and heard. He confused Greenland for Iceland — which I guess is understandable
in the context of also repeatedly calling Greenland a big “piece of ice.” He
mumbled and he meandered. He’s mastering a whole new oxymoron: logy logorrhea.
Bret: He
also terrified. Going into the speech, I was almost sure that what he really
wanted was to gain some control of Greenland’s mineral resources. Leaving the
speech, I was absolutely sure he means to take the whole island, and that his
negotiating tactic will be to tie Danish cession of the territory to America’s
continued participation in NATO.
Frank:
Who the hell knows? Greenland kind of got lost in all the all-purpose
chest-thumping. “The United States is keeping the whole world afloat.” “Without
us, most of the countries don’t even work.” Does cringing burn calories, Bret?
If so, I just lost five pounds.
Bret:
Sadly for me, the pastries here are free as well as delicious. They’re also a
lot more soothing than Trump’s Truth Social posts claiming that everything has
now been solved and everything’s cool with our on-again, off-again European
allies.
Let’s
switch to domestic politics, Frank. Thoughts on Josh Shapiro, the Pennsylvania
governor, writing that he was being asked whether he was a “double agent for
Israel” during his vetting to be Kamala Harris’s No. 2?
Frank:
It’s a question as deeply offensive as it is idiotic, and it makes clear how
inept and adrift the Harris campaign often was. I can see why Shapiro wanted to
share it; he has surely and understandably been outraged and wounded by it for
a long time. But I wonder, Bret: Was it politically wise of him to divulge that
and so much else about Harris in his new book, “Where We Keep the Light:
Stories From a Life of Service,” which comes out on Tuesday and is clearly part
of the preamble to a 2028 presidential bid?
Bret: I
have no idea whether the revelation will help Shapiro, but it was morally
important for him to put it out there for the factual record.
Oh, and
speaking of Minnesota, I know we both agree that what ICE is doing there is
appalling. My cynical question is: Will the administration benefit or suffer
politically from this?
Frank:
I’ll answer that after saying this: Harris definitely should have chosen
Shapiro over Walz, because Shapiro has been the more impressive governor. And
she seems to have resisted him for reasons that reflect poorly on her. But the
2024 election didn’t turn on that decision. Will the 2026 midterms turn on the
ugly spectacle of federal overreach and aggression in Minneapolis? Right now,
what’s happening there indeed appears to be hurting the administration, and
justly so. But we have to see how it does or doesn’t fit into the next nine and
a half months. We’re a long, long way from November.
Bret: I
wish U.S. elections turned more often on moral questions. But, usually, the
only question that counts is the one Ronald Reagan asked in 1980 during his
famous debate with Jimmy Carter: “Are you better off than you were four years
ago?” And here the jury is out. The job market is soft; college graduates are
having a hard time finding jobs; and it’s getting harder than ever to buy a
first home. At the same time, economic growth is strong, inflation is level,
consumer spending is robust, and — Greenland jitters aside — markets are up
overall. All of which means the verdict that regular Americans may make about
this administration may differ markedly from that of, say, a pair of Times
columnists.
Frank:
Are you really and truly suggesting that we’re not perfect proxies for the
average voter, Bret?
Bret:
Well, I don’t watch football, I’ve never hit a golf ball, I don’t like beer, my
favorite rock band is from Canada, I grew up in Mexico City, and I went to prep
school in New England. Other than that, I’m a totally typical American.
Frank: I
watch too much football, I drink everything and I live outside the Acela
corridor — in purple North Carolina, no less — so maybe I’m a one-man focus
group!
Bret:
Does Chapel Hill really count as “purple?”
Frank:
You and your chromatic nit-picking! In any case, I want to offer an anagram of
your wish about elections and moral considerations. I wish more of us took the
“are you better off” question to mean more than economics, more than material
goods. None of us will be better off if the United States estranges our western
European allies and impersonates Russia. None of us will be better off with a
metastasizing ICE as the goon-squad instrument of an erratic president. None of
us will be better off with a thoroughly politicized Justice Department and the
medical nostrums of the public health quacks whom MAGA elevates. And all of
that will, in time and in turn, have profound economic consequences.
Bret:
Everything you say is right and true and maybe, probably, it will help
Democrats in the midterms. That’s when ideologically or morally motivated
voters like you and me feel especially keen to make a statement.
Frank:
Indeed, and I hope Democrats can simultaneously emphasize the economy and make
clear to voters that other dynamics demand their close attention.
Bret: But
it’s also worth thinking about how Americans who don’t share our views see it.
They see a “resistance” movement in Minneapolis that seems to think that
disrupting church services is OK because they don’t like the pastor. They see
the administration getting rid of a food pyramid that encouraged people to eat
a lot of carbs, which helped Make America Fat. They see the administration
getting rid of a local despot without getting stuck in a regime-change mission.
And they see a Democratic Party that is obsessive in its loathing for Trump but
doesn’t seem to have a clear agenda, or any agenda at all, for doing things
better.
Frank: I
do not think a new food pyramid will Make America Skinny — though Ozempic and
its kinfolk might, pending cost and access.
Bret:
Here’s something better: Make American Dream Again. I’ve been thinking about it
because I’ve been following the progress of the Artemis II mission — the manned
mission to the moon that will launch sometime in the next few weeks will take
off from Pad 39B of the Kennedy Space Center. I was too young to ever watch the
Apollo program. But I grew up obsessed with names like Aldrin, Anders, Bean,
Borman, Cernan, Collins, Conrad, Duke, Irwin, Lovell, Mattingly, Schmitt,
Shepard, Young, and, of course, Armstrong. Now the names are Glover, Hansen,
Koch and Wiseman — three great Americans and one very cool Canadian. They’ll be
flying around the moon, much like Apollo 8 and 10, in preparation for a moon
landing, ideally before the decade is out. It’s a reminder that, much like in
the late 1960s, we can uplift ourselves in otherwise dark times.


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