On Politics: Trump faces down Biden’s demons
Too old? Tough economy? The presidents change, but the troubles are familiar.
On Politics
December 12, 2025

Good evening. President Trump is facing some of the same problems that bedeviled President Biden. My colleague Shawn McCreesh, a White House reporter, is here to explain. We’ll start with the headlines. — Jess Bidgood

  • The Trump administration is providing the names of all travelers passing through U.S. airports to immigration officials in search of people with deportation orders, in an expansion of its crackdown.
  • House Democrats released new photos from Jeffrey Epstein’s estate that highlighted his ties to powerful men. The images lacked context, and their release came ahead of a deadline next Friday for the Justice Department to make public many of its investigative files about the Epstein case.
  • For most people, the tax cuts that President Trump signed into law this summer have yet to materialize. But many of America’s largest companies have not had to wait and are already cashing in on the savings.
President Trump walking in a door of the Oval Office.
President Trump has recently faced questions about his health and handling of the economy. Doug Mills/The New York Times

Trump is facing down Biden’s demons

There is an adage about Washington that if you stay here too long, you risk becoming the thing you started off scorning.

That old saw has taken on new life lately as President Trump finds himself confronting the same troubles that came to define his nemesis, former President Joe Biden — namely the perceptions that he was too old and that he had mishandled the economy and Americans’ concerns about it.

Trump has recently been filmed struggling to stay awake during a cabinet meeting and in the Oval Office. His press secretary is fielding constant questions about his health: She was asked why his hand is often bandaged; her answer was that he shakes lots of hands and takes lots of aspirin. And his aides are congratulating him for performing basic functions of the job. “It’s 7:00 p.m. on a Saturday night and President Trump is still in the Oval Office working,” Steven Cheung posted on X last week, adding that it was “truly remarkable to witness.”

It’s all very Biden-coded.

In some ways, so was the speech that Trump gave about the economy on Tuesday in Pennsylvania. He was there because his political advisers worry he may be making the same mistakes made by Biden, who insisted to voters that the economy was better than they realized and that they weren’t actually suffering as much as they felt they were.

Trump pretty much did exactly that on Tuesday, bragging about economic data while telling people that their children didn’t need “37 dolls” or lots of pencils. This was a day after he told Politico that he graded his economy an “A+++++.”

That struck some members of his party as callous. “You can’t gaslight people and tell them that their bills are affordable, and you can’t tell them that the economy is in A+++,” Representative Marjorie Taylor Greene of Georgia said to CBS as part of the MAGA heretic media tour she’s been on. “I think it’s insulting to people’s intelligence and I don’t care how may charts he wants to throw up.”

What’s curious about watching Trump become ensnared by the same perceptions that dragged down Biden is that Trump has continued to attack Biden for the very things that Trump is now being attacked about.

He keeps calling him “Sleepy Joe,” even as he’s the one dozing off. And he keeps railing about Biden’s economy even though Trump has been in office for nearly 11 months.

Hardly a day goes by that Biden’s name does not come flying out of Trump’s mouth. In fact, according to a review of all his speeches throughout the year, Tuesday’s was the one in which he mentioned Biden the most.

An analysis of his first 50 days in office conducted in March by The New York Times found that Trump mentioned the name “Biden” 6.32 times a day on average. At the cabinet meeting last week where Trump struggled to stay awake, he spoke about Biden eight times during one 20-minute window. That was more than 300 days into his second term.

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THE MOMENT

President Trump dancing with his arms raised at a casino in Mount Pocono, Pa.
Doug Mills/The New York Times

And speaking of Trump’s remarks this week in Pennsylvania: My colleague Doug Mills, a Times photographer, was on hand at the casino as the president spoke. His remarks were supposed to center on affordability, but he frequently wandered off topic. Doug captured him here performing a dance that was one of the hallmarks of his presidential campaign.

Using his patented “weave,” his remarks jumped from subject to subject: He attacked transgender Americans and electric cars. He accused Joe Biden of exacerbating illegal immigration. But he also conceded that Susie Wiles, his chief of staff, had told him recently, “We have to start campaigning, sir.”

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Zohran Mamdani poses with members of the Talking Headers, a co-ed rec-league soccer team.
Zohran Mamdani (back row, second from right) with his old rec-league soccer team, the Talking Headers. Patrick Kargol

ONE LAST THING

Before he was mayor-elect, he played in a rec soccer league

When Zohran Mamdani played for a rec-league soccer team called the Talking Headers, he was known for his foot skills and powerful shooting.

But his penchant for ambitious, risky dribbles made some of his teammates roll their eyes.

Mamdani, now the mayor-elect of New York City, has long been obsessed with soccer, my colleague Andrew Keh writes. His fondness for the sport frequently bubbled up during his campaign — as he kicked a ball around in shirtsleeves, or swooned over his favorite English club, Arsenal.

As New York politics undergoes a generational shift, Andrew writes, it’s somehow fitting that the city has elected its first soccer-mad mayor.

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