Trump Inauguration Debrief; January 6th Pardons; Day One Executive Orders; Biden Pardons His Family; College Football National Champs
– Welcome to Mo News (00:00)
– Trump Sworn In As 47th President (02:45)
– Who Was In The Room Where The Inauguration Happened
– Trump Pardons Roughly 1,500 Criminal Defendants Charged In The Jan. 6 Capitol Attack (18:00)
– Trump's Immigration Executive Orders: What to Know (19:00)
– Trump Declares A 'National Energy Emergency’ (25:10)
– Trump Signs Executive Orders Proclaiming Only Two Biological Sexes, Halting Diversity Programs (28:25)
– Trump To Rename Gulf of Mexico, Mount Denali (31:00)
– Biden Issues Preemptive Pardons For Trump Critics And Biden Family Members (34:50)
– Ohio State Wins College Football Playoff National Championship (40:00)
– On This Day (41:15)
—
Mosheh Oinounou (@mosheh) is an Emmy and Murrow award-winning journalist. He has 20 years of experience at networks including Fox News, Bloomberg Television and CBS News, where he was the executive producer of the CBS Evening News and launched the network's 24 hour news channel. He founded the @mosheh Instagram news account in 2020 and the Mo News podcast and newsletter in 2022.
Jill Wagner (@jillrwagner) is an Emmy and Murrow award-winning journalist. She's currently the Managing Editor of the Mo News newsletter and previously worked as a reporter for CBS News, Cheddar News, and News 12. She also co-founded the Need2Know newsletter, and has made it a goal to drop a Seinfeld reference into every Mo News podcast.
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Transcript
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Speaker 2 I'm Nicole Lapin, the only financial expert you don't need a dictionary to understand. It's time for some money rehab.
Speaker 5 Hi, this is Mo Schwanunu, the Mo from Mo News. If you're familiar with us on Instagram or our podcast, I'm a longtime TV news producer who launched an independent news brand just a few years ago.
Speaker 5 As you know, Nicole is on maternity leave. So this week, my co-host Jill and I are guest hosting Money Rehab.
Speaker 5
Each day, we're going to be sharing the latest episode of Mo News right here on the Money Rehab feed. So you guys get the news you need to know every day this week.
Here's today's episode.
Speaker 5 Hey, everybody, it is Tuesday, January 21st, 2025. You're listening to the Mo News podcast.
Speaker 4
I'm Mosh Wanunu. And I'm Jill Wagner.
This is the place where we bring you just the facts.
Speaker 5 And we read all the news and read between the lines so you don't have to and cover history on Monday, a huge day in American history with the inauguration of Donald Trump again.
Speaker 4 And Moshe, we are recording with me in New York and you are still in Washington, D.C.
Speaker 5 Yeah, making my way back late Monday, but still was in D.C.
Speaker 5 for this sort of want want inauguration because it wasn't out on the National Mall. It was indoors, still lots of Trump supporters around town talking to them.
Speaker 5 Super pumped, super excited. The line from a number of them, America is back.
Speaker 5 They were excited about the weekend, the festivities, a number of inaugural balls last night as sort of the high-priced donors were celebrating in black tie last night.
Speaker 5 But already, Trump got to business within minutes of the inauguration yesterday.
Speaker 4 Yeah, so let's get to some news here. Donald Trump is officially the president again and off to a quick start with a number of executive orders.
Speaker 4 We'll recap the inauguration and what's next for his presidency.
Speaker 4 First, on immigration, declaring a national emergency at the southern border as immigration agents prepare for a crackdown on undocumented criminals in Chicago today.
Speaker 4 The president issued a sweeping pardon, roughly 1,500 criminal defendants charged in the January 6th Capitol attack.
Speaker 4 Plus, Trump declares a national energy emergency and signs executive orders proclaiming that there are only two biological sexes and halting diversity and inclusion programs in the government.
Speaker 4 Finally, Trump announced he'll rename the Gulf of Mexico and Mount Denali.
Speaker 5 Jill, we'll tell you about what's behind that,
Speaker 5 including the renaming of America's tallest mountain.
Speaker 4 And right before leaving office, Joe Biden issues a number of controversial last-minute pardons, including to several family members.
Speaker 5 Yeah, literally announced just minutes to go, his people put it out. Jill, there are a number of Democrats that are very unhappy about the optics of this, the decision here.
Speaker 5
By the way, it wasn't just limited to his family. Fauci got a pardon.
We'll explain it.
Speaker 4 Another excuse for us to say, you get a pardon, you get a pardon, you get a pardon.
Speaker 5 Everybody got Jill didn't get a pardon, and Biden didn't pardon himself, but the rest of the family got him.
Speaker 4 And last, we'll have a recap of the college football playoff national championship. And Moshe has on the stay in history.
Speaker 5 Jill, a historic moment on this day in 2020 that I'll remind you of, even though we probably don't want to remember.
Speaker 4 All right, at 12 p.m. Eastern Time on Monday, Donald Trump officially became the nation's 47th president.
Speaker 4 On Monday, in the Capitol Rotunda, Trump recited the 35-word presidential oath of office administered by Chief Justice John Roberts.
Speaker 4 He hit the ground running, signing a number of executive orders within minutes of taking the oath of office, but not before he took the stage for a nearly 30-minute inaugural speech where he began by painting a picture of an America that needs saving.
Speaker 4 He took aim at the Biden administration, saying, Our nation has suffered greatly in recent years, and he vowed to bring about an America that is respected, admired, prosperous, and strong.
Speaker 4 Similar to his speech in 2017, he spent time focused on calling out what he believes were the flaws of the previous administration.
Speaker 4 As he stood several feet from outgoing President Biden and Vice President Harris, Trump talked about ushering in a golden age of America, promising a new chapter of his America First agenda.
Speaker 4 In fact, the two most popular words in the speech, America and American, he said them 41 times combined. So let's hear some of it.
Speaker 6 The golden age of America begins right now.
Speaker 6 From this day forward, our country will flourish and be respected again all over the world.
Speaker 6 We will be the envy of every nation and we will not allow ourselves to be taken advantage of any longer.
Speaker 6 In recent years, our nation has suffered greatly, but we are going to bring it back and make it great again, greater than ever before.
Speaker 6 We will be a nation like no other, full of compassion, courage, and exceptionalism.
Speaker 4 Moshe, I was one of the millions of people watching from home.
Speaker 5 It was most of us, Joel. As we all know,
Speaker 4 but as Trump was just going off on what horrible shape the country is in, and without naming Biden and Harris, really taking aim at them, I felt awkward for like everybody in there.
Speaker 4 Is this a normal thing that incoming presidents do while the outgoing president is sitting five feet from them?
Speaker 5 No, we've had very contentious elections in years past, but typically in the inaugural, it's about looking forward, what they're going to do.
Speaker 5 Less a campaign-style indictment of the previous administration, but this is Trump style, right?
Speaker 5 He did this in front of Obama in 2017, talking about the American carnage that laid before him from the Obama administration in 2017.
Speaker 5 Now eight years later, slightly lighter touch here, I guess, from Trump this time, but nonetheless, going after Biden. And, you know, you could see Biden kind of like looking down at the ground.
Speaker 5 And they were indoors, so like much closer than they would have been if they had the kind of typical setup outdoors.
Speaker 5 So again, could Trump have probably just focused on what he was going to do without just like trashing the guy he just beat? No, but such is his way, right?
Speaker 5 That's sort of like, don't let the door hit you on the way out, but I'm going to hit you a couple times with it as we're leaving here.
Speaker 5 Even though he engaged in these niceties and riding to the Capitol together and they had tea together, you know, Biden brought back these traditions that exist.
Speaker 5 Nonetheless, Trump had choice words for Biden in his inaugural address.
Speaker 4 He did spend most of the speech giving very specific details about executive orders he signed on his first day in office, laying out the priorities of his administration, a list of many initiatives he ran on.
Speaker 4 He is already already engaged in. He called these executive orders the complete restoration of America and the revolution of common sense.
Speaker 4 He vowed to declare a national emergency at the border and send troops down to stop illegal immigration.
Speaker 4 He immediately shut down the CBP1 app that allowed asylum seekers to begin the process of entering America.
Speaker 4 He also declared a national energy emergency and said the government would end diversity, equity, and inclusion initiatives.
Speaker 4 We're going to get into those specifics later along with some of the executive orders that he signed on his first day.
Speaker 4 It is also worth noting who else was on screen during Trump's speech to the nation.
Speaker 4 Sitting behind him on stage were members of his family, some of his cabinet picks, and the former presidents and vice presidents.
Speaker 4 Prominent seats on stage also went to tech CEO billionaires, who in some cases were sitting in front of his cabinet members.
Speaker 4 Mind you, Trump had to move his inauguration indoors because of record cold temperatures in Washington.
Speaker 4 So seats were limited to several hundred people as opposed to thousands that could have watched had it been held outside. There was an overflow room in the Capitol.
Speaker 4
Crowds were invited to watch in DC's Capitol One arena. So these were hot tickets amongst the many Trump allies and donors.
And only some very special people were given the look.
Speaker 4 Moshe, who stuck out to you?
Speaker 5 So it was notable for those tech CEOs, right? Elon Musk, the Tesla and SpaceX CEO, who spent hundreds of millions of dollars to support Trump and is a co-running Doge.
Speaker 5 Though it looks like he's running Doge on his own now, Vivek Ramaswamy, reportedly now done with Doge before it even got started, is headed back to Ohio after some internal issues there.
Speaker 4 So, Moshe, you and I have made predictions about how long certain Trump relationships were going to last. You're saying Vivek Ramaswamy didn't make it through day one.
Speaker 5 No, no, he
Speaker 5 does not appear so based on the reporting here. It looks like in the battle of Elon versus Vivek, Vivek is already out
Speaker 5
at Doge, and we'll continue to watch all of this. But back to the tech CEOs here.
In addition to Musk in that row, we saw Jeff Bezos, the Amazon founder, along with his girlfriend Lauren Sanchez.
Speaker 5 They donated to the inaugural fund. Also, there, Mark Zuckerberg and his wife, Priscilla.
Speaker 5 We've noted that Zuckerberg also donated to the inaugural fund and has made a point of making some moves in recent weeks to try to engender goodwill with the new administration, including dropping fact-checking, putting a couple Trump buddies on the meta board, doing the interview with Joe Rogan, where he went after Joe Biden, among several things.
Speaker 5 Also there, the Apple CEO Tim Cook, the Google co-founder Sergei Brin, the TikTok boss Shosi Chu, the OpenAI CEO Sam Allman, again, sitting in the row in front of the cabinet.
Speaker 5
Like Marco Rubio had a worse seat than Jeff Bezos, if you looked behind him. Also notable a number of top donors.
Mary Madelsoon, the casino magnate. wife of Sheldon Adelson, who passed away.
Speaker 5 Mary Madelson, I think, gave more than $100 million, if not closer to $200 million for the campaign here. So she had a very prominent seat there.
Speaker 5 Now, we've always seen sort of prominent CEOs and business leaders potentially attend inaugurations here, but never seated like this,
Speaker 5 this prominently. In that cabinet row, you did see the number of cabinet nominees there, including those who are still waiting for a hearing, like Robert F.
Speaker 5 Kennedy Jr., Pam Bondi was nominated for AG, Cash Patel nominated for FBI director, Doug Bergum,
Speaker 5 among several others there. And then there were like the overflow rooms in the Capitol, where even governors and spouses of members of Congress, et cetera, were seated there.
Speaker 5 And then Trump went to go visit with them.
Speaker 5 But the fact that these tech CEOs, some of these donors, et cetera, were in the room where it happened, pretty remarkable given that there was just a couple hundred of them in there.
Speaker 5 A reminder, we haven't seen an indoor ceremony like this since 1985, since the second Reagan inaugural. You noted the cold temps.
Speaker 5 Chill, you know, it was cold, but like, was it as cold as Obama was in 2009? Sure.
Speaker 5 It is leading to questions as to whether crowd size was really the issue here, given that a number of hotels were not even fully booked here. And so, whether,
Speaker 5 you know, we had mentioned security is a potential issue, haven't seen more on that.
Speaker 5 A crowd size weighing potentially here on Trump, even though he won't admit it openly, you know, especially given how cold it is. How many people were he's going to have on the mall?
Speaker 5
We know how important crowd size is to him. There were the comparisons between the Obama inaugural and the first Trump.
This is now the second Trump. There wasn't that much buzz.
Speaker 5 So the feeling, even among Republicans and Trump supporters, as I spoke to him, was like, yeah, this is probably a crowd-size thing.
Speaker 4 Meaning that he was given the choice and chose to do it inside because he was nervous that the crowd size wouldn't be.
Speaker 5
Yeah, I mean, presidents have a choice to do wherever they want in the world. You know, like, you're the president.
This is your inauguration. Where would you like to hold it?
Speaker 5 So he made the choice on Friday to move it inside, noting the weather.
Speaker 5
But certainly there are folks who believe weather wasn't the only issue as far as this. And Trump really had a unique day yesterday.
We haven't seen
Speaker 5 an inauguration like this again in 40 years. And then he went to the arena and addressed fans where he then signed executive orders in front of them.
Speaker 5
It was an interesting contrast, though, that ceremony. You know, Trump officially is the oldest person to be inaugurated as president.
He's actually several months older than Biden was four years ago.
Speaker 5
And then in contrast, you had a 40-year-old J.D. Vance, the third youngest ever VP in American history, behind Teddy Roosevelt and Richard Nixon, when Nixon was Eisenhower's VP.
So he was there.
Speaker 5
You know, he had his daughter behind him, adorably like sucking her thumb. Like he's got a very young family.
He's only 40 years old.
Speaker 5 So a notable contrast there. The man who's a heartbeat away from the presidency happens to be the third youngest, whereas the president, technically, the oldest to ever take the oath of office.
Speaker 4 Notably, Trump did not highlight tech that much in his speech, although he did give a shout out to Elon Musk, in a sense, when he mentioned his ambitions to plant a U.S. flag on Mars.
Speaker 4
After Trump's speech, Carrie Underwood sang America the Beautiful a cappella after a technical difficulty. So you could briefly hear the music.
Then it cut out.
Speaker 4 She waited more than a minute for the music to come back, during which time the camera was cutting to various people, kind of like smirking and being awkward.
Speaker 5
It was a very strange thing. Like just suddenly there was a huge tech issue until she was like, you know what? We know the words.
Let's just do this. Like let's not wait any longer.
Speaker 4 But I felt like it was one of those like tech CEOs. They're just like us because they were all like awkward.
Speaker 4 And like, I felt like I was doing that myself watching, kind of like, oh my God, what's going to happen now? Elon Musk was giggling.
Speaker 4 Yes, maybe we're immature.
Speaker 5
But more power to Carrie Underwood there. Some artists might not have been willing to do it, but she knows her voice.
She knows he has her voice. And she did an incredible rendition.
Speaker 4 In fact, based on the one or two seconds of the music that played, it sounded like what she did a cappella was more powerful than it would have been had she sang over the band.
Speaker 4 As we mentioned before earlier in the day, the Bidens revived the tradition of the outgoing first couple hosting the incoming first couple for tea in 2021. Trump did not attend Biden's inauguration.
Speaker 4 Also, they took part in the tradition of Biden and Trump riding to the Capitol together in the presidential limo.
Speaker 4 It came as you saw Obama, Bush, Clinton, all in attendance, none of whom feel very warmly about Trump.
Speaker 5 None of them feel warmly about Trump.
Speaker 5 Some who literally, you know, Hillary snickered at times at some of the things Trump was saying in his speech.
Speaker 5 Now she's had to watch him get inaugurated twice after losing the presidency.
Speaker 5 But nonetheless, this feeling, despite everything that was said during the campaign trail, despite saying this guy's a fascist, he's going to ruin democracy, they were all there, minus Michelle Obama, who stayed in Hawaii.
Speaker 5
As I mentioned, the camera would pan at times to Biden and former VP Kamala Harris a lot during the speech. They were cordial.
They clapped at times, smiled, stood when crowds stood.
Speaker 5 Nonetheless, got to be zoning at a time like that, right? Just being like, oh my God, like, I can't believe what I'm watching before. You know, Kamala Harris thinking she could have beat him.
Speaker 5 I mean, Biden still said in the interviews as recently as last week, I totally could have beaten this guy and made part of his legacy, like, you know, ensuring that Trump would not return to the White House again.
Speaker 5 So, a lot of probably complex thoughts happening in their mind as this goes on. And then you do see like Trump's smile and the smiles of his family,
Speaker 5
the feeling from them that they're back. Watching George W.
Bush sort of has that 10-year-old boy energy at a family event at times, like just making weird facial expressions, et cetera.
Speaker 5 It's like watching Prince Louis out in the UK.
Speaker 4 As soon as he walked onto the podium, he gave somebody like a very aggressive wink.
Speaker 5 It was just great. It was classic.
Speaker 4 He's W.
Speaker 5 He's W.
Speaker 5 As I mentioned, Hillary Clinton cracked up specifically when Trump announced he was renaming the Gulf of Mexico the Gulf of America.
Speaker 5 She could not help herself but to laugh to the point where I think Bill looked over at her towards the end, being like, All right, you know, like get it together,
Speaker 5 like you're former Secretary of State, former first lady, former senator.
Speaker 5 We knew this part was coming, we knew this part was coming.
Speaker 5 Um, and then the revival of the tradition, the Bidens walking out of the Capitol, the Trumps and the Vance is waving at them as they flew off in the Marine One helicopter, though it was not called Marine One because he's the former president.
Speaker 5 It's like a special air mission something, and then he got to take the presidential jet to California, where they're staying out there.
Speaker 5 And it just so happens that Biden is staying at the estate of a billionaire Democratic donor out there in Santa Inez, California. And that's all she wrote for Joe Biden for now.
Speaker 4 After the official inauguration ceremony, Trump headed to meet supporters in an overflow area of the Capitol, which is where he really let loose, talking about some of the agenda items that he didn't mention in his official inauguration speech.
Speaker 4 And that includes a nod to the January 6th rioters saying that they'll be happy with his actions, suggesting that he may pardon them.
Speaker 4 He then criticized Joe Biden for some of the pardons that he had made, including former Representatives Liz Cheney and Adam Kinzinger, who were the only Republicans on the House Select Committee for January 6th.
Speaker 6 Why are we helping some of the people? Why are we helping Liz Cheney? I mean, Liz Cheney is a disaster. She's a crying lunatic and
Speaker 6
crying Adam Kinzinger. He's a super crying.
I never saw the guy not cry. He's always crying.
I looked at him. I remember years ago he was actually on my side.
Speaker 6 And then one day, you know, when you don't want to kill people in wars, they turn against you.
Speaker 5 So, Jill, I don't know what he's talking about, the crying. I've never seen Adam Kinzinger cry.
Speaker 4 I've seen him a lot, by the way.
Speaker 5 Like, I've seen
Speaker 5
it, he's on like CNN all the time. Anyway, this is the speech Trump wanted to give.
In fact, he said as much in the speech.
Speaker 5 He's like, you know, they made me be all presidential for my inaugural speech. Then he walks downstairs to give this speech, unfiltered, upset about the Biden last-second pardons.
Speaker 5 We'll talk about those in a little bit here in the podcast. He said that the Vance has tapered his language a bit and made him talk about unity for the official speech.
Speaker 5 And then he goes and gives this speech,
Speaker 5 which is sort of the raw, unfiltered Trump that you normally got at his campaign rallies, where he's like, can you believe they did this? Can you believe they did that?
Speaker 5 And this is really what I'm going to do.
Speaker 4 I love that he thought that his inauguration speech was unifying
Speaker 5 by new standards. By Trump standards.
Speaker 5 Right, because he normally gives the kind of like, you know, just going after everybody speech, which is the after speech that he gave off the cuff there in a different part of the Capitol.
Speaker 4 Trump then went to Capitol One arena, signing executive orders in front of a crowd of 20,000, along with his family. So that replaced the inaugural parade that was intended for supporters.
Speaker 4 It was moved inside because it was just too cold.
Speaker 4 And then after returning to the White House Monday evening, President Trump pardoned about 1,500 people who stormed the Capitol on January 6th, 2021, amid Trump's false accusations that the 2020 election was rigged against him.
Speaker 4 He also commuted the sentences of 14 of his supporters in connection with the attack.
Speaker 4 And that includes individuals associated with the Proud Boys and oath keepers, like Enrique Tario, that is the Proud Boys leader who was convicted of seditious conspiracy.
Speaker 4 Tario was serving 22 years in federal prison.
Speaker 4 Trump's actions include, quote, full, complete, and unconditional pardons for some of the most notorious participants in the attack, including others convicted of assaulting police, destroying property, carrying firearms, or otherwise contributing to the violent rampage.
Speaker 4 The president also ordered the Justice Department to shut down hundreds of pending January 6th prosecutions.
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Speaker 4 Okay, now to the speed read where we're going to dive a bit deeper into some of the immediate moves that Trump is making.
Speaker 4 In his inaugural speech, the president announced his first executive order will be to declare a national emergency at the southern border.
Speaker 4 He also announced he'll reinstate what is called the Remain in Mexico policy from his first term, which requires migrants to stay in Mexico until their U.S.
Speaker 4 immigration court date, which critics have argued exposes them to danger. As part of his immigration agenda, Trump said all illegal entry will be immediately halted.
Speaker 4 He's going to send troops to the southern border and officially designate cartels as foreign terrorist organizations.
Speaker 4 Also, today, through executive order, Trump said he'll invoke the Alien Enemies Act of 1798, which gives presidential powers to detain non-citizens during times of war to, quote, eliminate the presence of foreign gangs and criminal networks bringing devastating crime to U.S.
Speaker 4 soil. So, most migrants who were waiting in Mexico to enter the U.S.
Speaker 4
and they had appointments with the Biden administration's CBP1 app that we had mentioned earlier. That app went offline at 12 p.m.
yesterday as Trump was being sworn in.
Speaker 4 And there are some images online where you see some of those migrants in tears, breaking down in tears after they were so close to coming into the United States.
Speaker 5 Yeah, though we've heard this from the Trump administration from the moment they won in November, that they were shutting this thing down, not to expect anything.
Speaker 5 And so ultimately here, it's going to be very hard at this juncture to be seeking asylum here in the U.S.
Speaker 5 as the Trump administration looks to do the exact opposite in terms of letting people into the country.
Speaker 5 In fact, their focus is not only not letting folks in the country, but beginning mass deportations.
Speaker 5
Then there's the 1798 Alien Enemies Act, which Trump mentioned, the more than 200-year-old law. This is going to face legal issues.
The same thing we saw first time around.
Speaker 5 The Trump folks feel like they haven't figured out this go-around, that everything they did was sort of haphazard eight years ago. They've had time to think it through.
Speaker 5 Nonetheless, still controversial to bring back a law from the John Adams administration here, but we'll see what judges rule, how judges rule on these various provisions that remain in Mexico policy.
Speaker 5 That was actually created by Trump, implemented back in 2019. It resulted in tens of thousands of migrants waiting for extended periods in Mexico, known formally as the Migrant Protection Protocol.
Speaker 5 It was criticized for pushing migrants into camps there in Mexico. But the criticism from the Trump folks has been, why are they allowed to wait here in the U.S.
Speaker 5 while we determine their asylum claim and safety, et cetera?
Speaker 5 But Remain in Mexico is also controversial, well, for obvious reasons, in Mexico, since many of these folks are not from Mexico, but from other countries,
Speaker 5 and they're remaining in Mexico.
Speaker 5 The rhetoric here from the Trump administration, very serious, Stephen Miller, the White House Deputy Chief of Staff, he's back again. You might remember him from the first go-around.
Speaker 5
He wrote very simply on X yesterday, all illegal aliens seeking entry into the U.S. should turn back now.
Anyone entering the U.S. without authorization faces prosecution and expulsion.
Speaker 5 Now, a reminder here, it's one of the reasons Trump was elected.
Speaker 5 When you look at polling, nearly two-thirds of Americans, including a majority of Hispanics, nearly half of Democrats, support deporting people who entered the country illegally in the last four years.
Speaker 5
Roughly 2.5 million migrants alone entered and just in 2023 alone, record numbers over these last four years. So Trump has promised the largest mass deportation in history.
It's extremely popular.
Speaker 5 87% of Americans, nine out of 10, support deporting undocumented migrants with a criminal record. And that's something, Jill, we're seeing support from the New York City mayor, Democrat.
Speaker 5 We're seeing support from the Colorado governor, a Democrat, especially when it comes to anyone who is here illegally with a criminal record.
Speaker 4 President-elect Trump's administration plans to initiate a large-scale deportation operation targeting illegal immigrants in Chicago, and that starts today.
Speaker 4 The operation involves 100 to 200 ICE agents who will focus on individuals with criminal histories and removal orders, but anyone in the country illegally could be targeted, according to the incoming border czar, Tom Homan.
Speaker 4 Homan said that public safety threats and fugitives are priorities, but that no illegal immigrant is off the table.
Speaker 5
Now, that focus on Chicago. We'll be watching that very closely today.
The mayor there has pledged to maintain the city's sanctuary status. So, how these raids work will be interesting to watch.
Speaker 5 Now, the governor in Illinois, a Democrat Pritzker, has said they will protect non-criminal undocumented residents, but anyone who's committed a crime here, even if it's like driving without a license, shoplifting, et cetera, you know, you saw that they passed the Lake and Riley Act recently with the Republican Congress.
Speaker 5
Ultimately, again, you see major support here even from Democrats. So Chicago will be the center of all of this today.
I imagine we'll see it in other cities in the coming days and weeks here.
Speaker 5 Trump is going to
Speaker 5 fulfill or try to fulfill his promises on the border. He's talked about clarifying the role of the military on the border, using the National Guard.
Speaker 5 He's talked about declaring a national emergency here as one of his provisions, designating the drug cartels in Mexico as terrorists. Now, that does have an impact.
Speaker 5 When you designate them as terrorists, that now means more people can claim asylum because they're like, well, I live in Mexico amongst terrorists.
Speaker 5 Now that you've declared the drug cartels terrorists, so you're obligated to take me in as an asylum seeker in the U.S.
Speaker 5 So some folks who know the law are worried about going ahead and designating the criminal cartels as terrorists. He's talked about also ending birthright citizenship.
Speaker 5 We didn't hear it in an inaugural speech,
Speaker 5 but we may be hearing it in the coming days here.
Speaker 5 What does that mean, ending birthright citizenship? Well, the 14th Amendment to the Constitution declares that if you were born in America, you are an American citizen, even if your parents are not.
Speaker 5 Now, Trump says he wants to end that, meaning if your parents are here illegally or didn't follow a process or happen to be here as tourists, just because you're born here doesn't mean you get citizenship.
Speaker 5 Again, the law says otherwise, has been adjudicated by the Supreme Court. So the 14th Amendment birthright citizenship fight, among the many things, we'll be watching on all things immigration.
Speaker 4 The second priority for President Trump is to declare a national energy emergency.
Speaker 4 During his inaugural speech, he vowed to rapidly bring down costs and defeat inflation caused by, quote, massive overspending and escalating energy prices.
Speaker 4 He said America will use its large reserves of oil and gas to bring down prices and enrich the nation. As we've reported here many times, the U.S.
Speaker 4 is currently the largest producer of crude oil in the world. But here he he is at the inauguration yesterday.
Speaker 6 The inflation crisis was caused by massive overspending and escalating energy prices, and that is why today I will also declare a national energy emergency. We will drill, baby, drill.
Speaker 6 America will be a manufacturing nation once again, and we have something that no other manufacturing nation will ever have, the largest amount of oil and gas of any country on earth, and we are going to use it.
Speaker 5 So, as we've told you on this podcast before,
Speaker 5
this all comes as the U.S. has never produced more oil and more gas than it has in the last couple of years.
The U.S. has produced more than any other country has on earth in history.
Speaker 5
But Trump says here it can be doing even more. So, he's talked about more drilling on federal lands.
He's talked about refining more capacity here.
Speaker 5 Now we'll see how the energy companies feel about this.
Speaker 5 Remember that with more supply, prices go down, especially if demand doesn't increase. So we'll see if they push back on all at drill, baby, drill.
Speaker 5 And then when it comes to energy, there's clean energy. Trump has vowed to put an end to the EV mandates and some of the clean energy provisions.
Speaker 5 that Biden enacted and passed as part of the Inflation Reduction Act in recent years.
Speaker 5 Though it's interesting, very strategically, the Democrats and Biden here made sure that a lot of these clean energy programs, the development of which are in red states, and money goes into red states, Republican states, meaning there's a lot of Republicans now or people employed in Republican-majority states who now have jobs, who are doing very well off of clean energy.
Speaker 5 Dems did this purposefully. So while they talk, you know, very simply of, you know, rescinding everything that Biden did when it came to clean energy, there are going to be Republicans in Congress.
Speaker 5 There are going to be Republican governors out there who are like, wait, actually, can we keep a couple of these things? Because it turns out that clean energy is cheaper in some cases.
Speaker 5 You're finding this out in Texas, some other places, than traditional energy.
Speaker 5 So it'll be interesting to see how the clean energy thing crumbles here or doesn't, depending on what people are discovering was actually built up over the last couple of years.
Speaker 4 Yeah, by the way, late Monday, he confirmed that he'd be pulling out of the Paris Climate Accord.
Speaker 5
Yeah, the Paris Climate Accord. We were in it under Obama.
Trump pulled us out of it. Biden put us back in it.
It obligates us to a number of promises related to clean energy.
Speaker 5 Now, a number of those promises states and cities are promising on their own, but nonetheless, this is something Trump promised to do, which is take us out of the international climate agreement officially.
Speaker 4 Now to another declaration during Trump's speech. He said that the official government policy will be that there are only two genders in the United States, male and female.
Speaker 4 Later, he signed an executive order instructing the State State Department and Department of Homeland Security to remove non-binary and other options from federal documents.
Speaker 4 An official from his administration claimed that this is to protect women from gender ideology extremism.
Speaker 4 The order will also prevent taxpayer money from being used for health care related to gender transitions.
Speaker 4 He also announced that he would sign an executive order ending diversity, equity, and inclusion efforts within the federal government. Here's how he put it:
Speaker 6 This week, I will also end the government government policy of trying to socially engineer race and gender into every aspect of public and private life.
Speaker 6 We will forge a society that is colorblind and merit-based.
Speaker 5 Now, remember here, Trump ran anti-woke, anti-trends. Literally, one of the ads that they say was most effective was the one that read, Harris is for they, them, Trump is for you.
Speaker 5 The executive actions here are expected to rescind the 2023 Biden policies related to the treatment of transgender individuals in the federal workplace.
Speaker 5 Remember in 2022, the Biden administration allowed U.S. citizens to be able to select the gender-neutral X as a marker on their passports, as opposed to male and female.
Speaker 5 The order will prevent taxpayer funds from being used for gender transition health care or add privacy and intimate spaces in facilities like prisons, migrant shelters, rape shelters.
Speaker 5 Now, civil rights organizations are reacting to all of this.
Speaker 5 They say they're filing a whole bunch of lawsuits, that it's not just simple with a wave of a pen here that Trump can do all of this, that transgender Americans have equal protection rights.
Speaker 5 That said, at the same time, you do have legal experts who say it is as simple as some of these executive orders, at least a certain aspect here, that while they can be challenged in court, the administration can implement these orders immediately, especially when it comes to moving transgender individuals into spaces that align with their birth sex as opposed to their current gender identity.
Speaker 5 That means, for example, trans women serving time in women's prisons could in short order be moved to male prisons.
Speaker 5 Again, Jill, you know, we're noting just within hours of taking office, Trump, you know, implementing a lot of things very quickly.
Speaker 4 President Trump also used the podium to talk about his ever-growing U.S. expansion plan, including saying that he plans to regain control of the Panama Canal.
Speaker 4 He also talked about sending American astronauts to the planet Mars in his inaugural address, envisioning a moment when the U.S. flag is planted on Martian soil.
Speaker 4 The audience broke into applause, and Elon Musk, the CEO of SpaceX and the world's richest man, was spotted giving two enthusiastic thumbs up.
Speaker 4 Musk has been a long-standing proponent of trying to colonize Mars.
Speaker 4 And finally, Trump said he plans to rename the Gulf of Mexico the Gulf of America, an idea that he first floated a couple of weeks ago.
Speaker 5 He floated it, and now it's official, at least as far as the U.S. government is concerned.
Speaker 5 Jill, it'll be interesting to see how many red state education departments pick up on this and literally start changing it in textbooks.
Speaker 4 Yeah, the map companies have to be happy.
Speaker 5 Well, the map companies don't have to do this. Like, ultimately, this is a government thing.
Speaker 5 So the State Department, when they put out a press release related to the Gulf of Mexico, they now have to use the term Gulf of America.
Speaker 5 The private companies, foreign countries, they don't have to use the term, but it's a matter of, you know, the government that Donald Trump currently oversees, that's what he has now officially declared it.
Speaker 5 Now, I imagine there'll be a lawsuit related to that as well, but
Speaker 5 it's within his power to do that.
Speaker 4 He also plans to revert Alaska's Denali Mountain back to Mount McKinley. In 2015, President Obama restored the name Denali, which was the title used by Alaskan Native tribes for centuries.
Speaker 4 Before that, it had been referred to as Mount McKinley since 1917 when it was renamed to honor the former President William McKinley.
Speaker 5 Yeah, so it was Mount Denali, then Mount McKinley, and then Obama made it Mount Denali again.
Speaker 5 And now Trump is going to make it Mount McKinley again.
Speaker 5 This has been a big thing for Trump, you know, restoring certain names here, despite they were trying to do this on behalf of the natives who live there. And then there's the larger thing, right?
Speaker 5 You know, you're talking about the Panama Canal and Greenland and Canada and all this stuff.
Speaker 5
Going back to several presidents now, you know, even Bush pre-9-11 was talking about approaching the world humbly. Now, of course, after 9-11, you know, Bush went in.
U.S.
Speaker 5 policy for a bit there was trying to remake certain adversary countries as democracies, but that didn't quite work out for us.
Speaker 5 So a number of presidents now have been talked about a more humble American foreign policy. And Trump, for the most part, has talked about no new wars here, except kind of post-election.
Speaker 5 He's talked about Canada as the 51st state, taking Greenland, reclaiming the Panama Canal. Now, how he's going to do all of that, given he's promising no new wars, complicated, right?
Speaker 5 How do you take back the Panama Canal shorten of invasion, given that Panama is like, yeah, no, it's our canal now. You know, thanks for building it a centuries ago.
Speaker 5 But then you promised it to us and you gave it to us in the 90s. Greenland's like, you know, we're not for sale.
Speaker 5 We are looking to be independent potentially.
Speaker 5
So how is that going to happen? Canada is saying, yeah, we're not really interested in becoming the 51st state. We're our own country.
We have our own sovereignty here.
Speaker 5 So, you know, Trump has his own concerns in regards to economic measures.
Speaker 5 He's got his concerns when it comes to Greenland and the mineral rights there and the Chinese interest there in the Panama Canal.
Speaker 5 The big issue is the Chinese increasing role in the ports and canal there and what it means for national security and economics. So there's legitimate concerns when it comes to U.S.
Speaker 5 foreign policy, but he's, you know, just declaring things like we're going to reclaim the Panama Canal that that's a piece of territory in a foreign country.
Speaker 5 So it's unclear how he's going to do that.
Speaker 5 Jill, I should note, we're going to be focused, doing a deep dive on that over on Monu's premium on all things Panama Canal, Greenland, the American expansion plan under Trump, what it may include and how it may go down, because we're still trying to figure it out over here.
Speaker 4 And this from CNN, Joe Biden making some controversial last-minute news as he left office and headed into Trump's inauguration.
Speaker 4 The former president issued some unprecedented preemptive pardons for five members of his family.
Speaker 4 His team cited his concerns about politically motivated attacks and investigations from incoming President Donald Trump.
Speaker 4 In his last statement as president, Biden said, quote, my family has been subjected to unrelenting attacks and threats motivated solely by a desire to hurt me, the worst kind of partisan politics.
Speaker 4 Unfortunately, I have no reason to believe that these attacks will end.
Speaker 4 The pardons were granted to his brother, James Biden, James's wife, Sarah Jones Biden, Biden's sister, Valerie Biden-Owens, and Valerie's husband, John Owens. Also, Francis Biden.
Speaker 4 That's another one of Biden's brothers. The White House announced the pardons with less than 20 minutes left in Biden's presidency.
Speaker 4 The announcement came as Biden entered the Capitol Rotunda to witness Trump swearing in before departing the Capitol for the last time as president.
Speaker 4 So most of the networks were reporting it basically as Trump was getting sworn in.
Speaker 5 Yeah, they're like pulling out the Bibles. Roberts walking up the stage and they're like, breaking news.
Speaker 5 Biden has pardoned his family members.
Speaker 5 So democrats in an uproar here you know the optics are terrible like literally the last you know if if they didn't do anything wrong why wait until the last possible second here to do it because the optics uh are pretty bad james biden his brother one of the brothers there who was pardoned has actually been investigated for years for the work he was doing with hunter biden uh was he getting an advantage due to his then brother who was vp and his connections in an interview back in 2020 biden criticized the idea of an outgoing president preemptively pardoning family members.
Speaker 5
At the time, there was a presumption that Trump was going to do that. And Biden was like, that's a terrible thing.
And now he's done it.
Speaker 5 A Trump team spokesperson wrote on X that even Schumer said that something like this would be a gross abuse of presidential pardon authority.
Speaker 5 And he was talking about Trump at the time, the Schumer person. So the fact that Biden has already pardoned Hunter Biden after promising he wouldn't do that has already upset people.
Speaker 5 And now there's that, apparently, according to people close to Biden.
Speaker 5 He weighed this decision very heavily, but couldn't in good conscience not protect his family, feeling that Trump would go after them, his adversaries. He wanted to save them the headache here.
Speaker 5
Again, the Biden folks say, well, they didn't do anything illegal. We just wanted to protect them from the legal issues.
Nonetheless, we will never know. Like we're never going to know here.
Speaker 5 And the optics here, especially again, with like minutes to go in his presidency, no ability to like ask him about it, has some people concerned. Right.
Speaker 4 And is this just going to be the new norm that any president can?
Speaker 5
Like Trump on his way out. Like now every president is going to just pardon all their family members preemptively.
Or anybody.
Speaker 4 Forget it. Not even their family members, like members of their administration, like their cabinet.
Speaker 5
Because there is a process for pardons. You'd have to go through the Justice Department.
They got to determine. Typically, you've committed a crime to go through a pardon.
Speaker 5 So this whole like anything they might have done since 2014, like pardon, like the pardon authority in the Constitution is pretty open-ended. And the Supreme Court's been differential on it.
Speaker 5 But there's a lot of concern about the precedent that Biden has opened up because, by the way, Jill, it wasn't even his, it wasn't just his family.
Speaker 4 That's right, he also issued preemptive pardons for General Mark Milley, Dr. Fauci, members of Congress who served on the January 6th, 2021 committee.
Speaker 4 This move is aimed, he says, at protecting these individuals from potential revenge by Trump. Among those pardoned, former Republican Representative Liz Cheney, who is a vocal Trump critic.
Speaker 4
She has been targeted in his calls for retribution. General Milley retired as chairman of the Joint Chiefs in 2023 and has faced GOP criticism over the Afghanistan withdrawal.
Dr.
Speaker 4 Fauci, a longtime government scientist, became a polarizing figure because of the federal response to the COVID-19 pandemic.
Speaker 5 The people here apparently didn't get a heads up that Biden was giving them these extra pardons. Fauci says, I really, truly appreciate the action President Biden has taken on my behalf.
Speaker 5 Let me be perfectly clear. I have committed no crime and there are no possible grounds for any allegation or threat of criminal investigation against me.
Speaker 5 Milley said that he was grateful, but again, didn't know about this in advance.
Speaker 5 The New York Times writes that in issuing the preemptive pardons here, Biden has effectively turned the constitutional power the president has of forgiveness into a protective shield against what he maintains would be politically motivated vengeance.
Speaker 5 No other president has employed executive clemency in such a broad and overt way.
Speaker 5 The presidency getting even more powerful here.
Speaker 5 Again, it's customary for a president to grant clemency at the end of his term if you committed a crime and there's a feeling that like either you were prosecuted unfairly or you've served your time.
Speaker 5
Unprecedented though to kind of use this protectively. And then you got Fauci even saying, I didn't ask for this.
Like I didn't need this. I haven't done anything illegal here.
Speaker 5 Nonetheless, Biden feeling like it was necessary to protect a certain number of individuals, including, as you mentioned, several of his family members.
Speaker 5 And finally, for some non-politics news, big news in in college football last night. Ohio State defeating Notre Dame 34-23 to win the national championship.
Speaker 5 A very big deal for the Ohio State Buckeyes winning the first ever 12-team college football playoff national championship. In fact, they went to multiple rounds this year.
Speaker 5
And if it wasn't for the 12-team situation, neither of these teams would have been in the national championship game. But a big deal for the Buckeyes here.
Their last championship was back in 2014.
Speaker 5 This is their ninth national championship overall, but their first in a decade here.
Speaker 5 They become the first team in college football history to win five games against teams that were ranked in the top five of the AP poll. At the time, they were playing Ohio State.
Speaker 5
Running back Quinchon Judkins rushing for 100 yards, two touchdowns. He also got a third score as a receiver.
Notre Dame tried to come back there in the second half.
Speaker 5 They were able to rally a bit to come within one score, but still not enough for the fighting Irish. They still will go back to the drawing board here.
Speaker 5
They haven't won a national championship championship over there at Notre Dame since 1988. So they're hoping next year, better luck.
Anyway, congrats to the Buckeyes.
Speaker 5 All right, now time for On This Day in History. On this day in 1975, 50 years ago, Shining Star by Earth, Wind and Fire released the iconic hit.
Speaker 5 On this day in 1977, speaking of pardons, Jimmy Carter granted a pardon to nearly all Vietnam War draft evaders, a blanket pardon to anyone who had evaded the draft, impacting thousands and thousands and thousands of people.
Speaker 5 On this day in innovation history, in 1981, the first DeLorean sports car rolled off the assembly line in Northern Ireland.
Speaker 5 You might know the DeLorean most famously for its use in Back to the Future as the car Marty and the dock take to the past and the future.
Speaker 5
And on this day in 2020, mentioned at the top, the first coronavirus case reported officially in the U.S. up in Washington state.
We We now know, Jill, that was not the first case.
Speaker 5
In fact, by then, there were probably hundreds of thousands of cases around the U.S. But at the time, we were very slow on tests.
We didn't have enough tests.
Speaker 5 And so officially, this date is marked down as the first positive acknowledged case in the U.S.
Speaker 4 I remember then New York City Mayor de Blasio being like, New York is fine. Nothing to see here.
Speaker 5
Take the subway. Take the cases.
And little did we know.
Speaker 4
Weeks later. All right, everyone.
Thanks for listening to the Mo News podcast on a historic day. If you like what you hear, please share this with your friends.
It will help us grow.
Speaker 4 Follow us and subscribe so you don't miss an episode and review us in the app store.
Speaker 5
Thanks for tuning in. Thanks for watching our coverage yesterday.
And stay tuned. It's going to be a news-packed
Speaker 5 week, month, year. Joe.
Speaker 4 Four years?
Speaker 5 Four years.
Speaker 4 All right. Bye, everyone.
Speaker 7 Thanks for listening to the Mo News podcast.
Speaker 7 podcasts,