Books

Jonathan Swan, Maggie Haberman’s book ‘Regime Change’ explains Trump’s second term: NPR

Jonathan Swan, Maggie Haberman's book 'Regime Change' explains Trump's second term: NPR

A gold-colored object engraved with the word “President” rests on the Resolute Desk in the Oval Office of the White House on November 10, 2025.

Jacqueline Martin/AP


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Jacqueline Martin/AP

the new York Times Journalist Jonathan Swan has spent the past 11 years covering President Trump through three political campaigns, his first and now second terms and the ongoing war with Iran. Swann says that other than the COVID-19 pandemic, he can’t remember a time when Trump “looked as stuck up as he does right now.”

“It’s quite clear that they realize that this war (with Iran) has not turned out well, not the way that Netanyahu had pitched them or Trump himself thought (it) would,” Swann says. “Trump is a guy who is naturally arrogant, but I think we’ve seen a very extreme version of that with this war.”

Swann and her co-author Maggie Haberman spoke to more than 1,000 sources for their new book, Regime Change: Inside the Imperial Presidency of Donald Trump. The book paints a picture of an unbridled president profoundly changing the American government and its international relations.

Swann says the president, who sat down to be interviewed for the book, was particularly focused on becoming a “great man in history” during his second term. During an interview, Trump showed Swann and Haberman a document that compared him to notorious historical figures such as Mao, Stalin, Hitler, Attila the Hun and Genghis Khan.

Swann says, “(The list) has nothing to do with ethics, it’s all just about pure power projection. And Trump was choosing to be in their company.” “Maggie and I talked about it afterward, and it really occurred to us that when you look at it through that lens, his second term makes a lot more sense.”

Swann says the president’s commitment to power is reflected in his decisions to go to war in Iran and implement regime change in Venezuela. But he also sees it manifested in the decor of Trump’s White House, which leans on what Swann calls the president’s “interior Louis XIV” style.

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