August 4, 2025

9m



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Transcript

Hello, this is Michael Moss.

Heather Cox Richardson is traveling today, and her travel arrangements did not allow her time to read today's letter, so I will be reading it in her place.

August 4th, 2025

President Donald J.

Trump's firing of the Commissioner of Labor Statistics on Friday for announcing that job growth has slowed dramatically has drawn a level of attention to Trump's assault on democracy that other firings have not.

Famously, authoritarian governments make up statistics to claim their policies are working well, even when they quite obviously are not.

Yesterday, former Treasury Secretary Larry Summers told George Stephanopoulos of This Week on ABC News,

This is the stuff of democracies giving way to authoritarianism.

Firing statisticians goes with threatening the heads of newspapers.

It goes with launching assaults on universities.

It goes with launching assaults on law firms that defend clients that the elected boss finds uncongenial.

This is really scary stuff.

In the bulwark, Bill Crystal called out the open assault on the truth, on the rule of law, on a free society as part of the broader pattern of the transformation of government information into pure propaganda.

Summers shot down Trump's claim that the commissioner had rigged the numbers in the jobs report to make him look bad.

These numbers are put together by teams of literally hundreds of people following detailed procedures that are in manuals, he said.

There's no conceivable way that the head of the Bureau of Labor Statistics could have manipulated this number.

Catherine Ann Edwards at Bloomberg explained the implications of Trump's determination to control economic statistics.

The peril isn't a potential recession.

It's losing highly reliable, accurate, and transparent data on the health of the world's largest economy.

As Ben Kasman pointed out in the New York Times, officials at the Federal Reserve, for example, need reliable statistics on inflation and unemployment to inform decisions about interest rates, which in turn affect how much Americans pay for car loans and mortgages.

Economist Paul Krugman noted that Trump lashed out against the head of the Bureau of Labor Statistics because most economists warned that Trump's economic policies would hurt the economy.

And the official data is starting to confirm that he was wrong and they were right.

Krugman suggested that those numbers will continue to get worse as Trump's tariffs and deportations start to show up in inflation.

An Associated Press North Center for Public Affairs research poll released today shows that 86% of American adults report that the cost of groceries is a source of stress, with 53% saying it causes major stress.

Only 14% of adults say the cost of groceries is not a source of stress for them.

On all his key issues, Trump is currently underwater, meaning that more people disapprove of his handling of them than approve.

And reports that he is abandoning his campaign promise to require healthcare insurance companies to pay for in vitro fertilization, or IVF, will not endear him to those voters either.

Krugman notes that as Trump's popularity is disintegrating, he appears to be ramping up his attempts to destroy American democracy.

At the same time, the administration continues to reel under pressure over the files related to the late convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.

Trump's inability to let the issue drop is keeping it very much alive.

On Sunday, the president railed against radio host Charlemagne the God for saying that the administration's poor handling of of the Epstein issue created an opportunity for traditional Republicans to take their party back.

As more information emerges about Trump's association with Epstein, Trump and his loyalists are trying hard to push stories suggesting that former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton or former President Barack Obama or other Democrats are the real criminals.

On July 24th, Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard claimed that officials in the administration of Barack Obama manufactured evidence in 2016 to suggest that Trump's campaign was connected to Russian operatives.

This was ridiculous on its face, but then the administration declassified documents it claimed proved their allegations.

But another set of documents released on August 1st said the first two emails that purportedly proved such a plan were instead, as Charlie Savage of the New York Times put it, most likely manufactured by Russian spies.

After Gabbard made her claims, media outlets reported that Attorney General Pam Bondi was surprised as well as annoyed by Gabbard's explosive accusations and, already in trouble for botching the Epstein issue, scrambled to support them.

Today, Sadie German, Josh Dawesy, and Brett Forrest of the Wall Street Journal reported that, according to an official at the Department of Justice, Bondi has signed an order directing a U.S.

attorney to present evidence concerning the matter to a grand jury.

This is a major escalation in their crusade to convince voters that the real story in the news should be that Trump is a victim.

The Wall Street Journal reporters note that the administration's claims come as the Trump administration has faced intense bipartisan criticism over its refusal to provide more information about the FBI investigation into convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.

Another aspect of the Epstein issue is also in the news today.

After the Wall Street Journal published the story by Khadija Saftar and Joe Palazzolo, reporting that Trump contributed a baudi birthday letter to an album Epstein's associate Ghylaine Maxwell compiled for Epstein's 50th birthday in 2003, Trump sued the Wall Street Journal's parent company Dow Jones and owner Rupert Murdoch for $10 billion.

But the lawsuit read as if it were written primarily to rile up Trump's base.

The Wall Street Journal stood firm on the accuracy of its reporting and the defendants moved to dismiss the lawsuit.

Then Trump asked a federal judge in Miami to force Murdoch to answer questions under oath within 15 days, and that, too, sounded like an attempt to display dominance.

The request stressed Murdoch's age and ill health as a reason for the request.

Murdoch is 94 years old, has suffered from multiple health issues throughout his life, is believed to have suffered recent significant health scares, and is presumed to live in New York, New York, all making him unlikely to be able to testify at a trial, the filing read.

Today, Trump quietly backed away from his demand for Murdoch's deposition, and both sides put off discovery, the process of disclosing information and evidence to the other party, at least until after the motion to dismiss has been decided.

Trump's former lawyer Todd Blanche, now Deputy Attorney General at the Department of Justice, has met twice with Maxwell, who says she she will testify openly and honestly before Congress about Epstein if she gets a pardon.

She is currently serving a 20-year sentence for sex trafficking and other charges.

Today, Alexander Bolton of The Hill said Republican senators are warning Trump and Bondi that they should consider very carefully whether it would be a good idea to grant Maxwell a pardon.

Also today, Casey Gannon of CNN reported that two of Epstein's victims have filed letters with the court expressing outrage at the Justice Department's handling of the Epstein files, suggesting that the department was protecting wealthy men at the expense of the victims.

Letters from an American was written by Heather Cox Richardson.

It was produced at Soundscape Productions, Dedham, Massachusetts.

Recorded with music composed by Michael Moss.