My year covering the historic start of Trump 2.0

After 38 years as a journalist in Washington, 23 of them in the White House, I thought I'd seen it all. That includes covering the first term of President Donald Trump, whose specialty is thinking—and acting—across borders.

But the past year has been truly unprecedented. For me, it all started on Christmas Eve 2024, when I made the first of two visits to the D.C. Jail. Outside, I talked to the participants holds an overnight vigil to honor those convicted of the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the U.S. Capitol. Their fervent hope: that a future President Trump will pardon the convicts, some of whom are friends and loved ones of those on guard.

These prison visits will herald a year of turmoil – with a president returning to office feeling vindicated and determined to wield his power, shaking up Washington while rewarding friends and punishing enemies.

Why did we write this

The Monitor's Linda Feldmann has covered numerous administrative and historical events during her decades in Washington. But, she writes, President Donald Trump's second term is unlike any other. She reflects on how she navigated a momentous and tumultuous year under the leadership of a president who returned to office determined to wield his power, shake up the federal bureaucracy and make his mark on the nation's capital.

Fast forward almost a month to Inauguration Day, when it was the Monitor’s turn to serve in the “press pool.” From dawn until late at night, I had a ringside seat on the big day for two American presidents and was required to write regular reports for the wider press. In the morning we watched the outgoing President Joe Biden in the pool, and at exactly noon we were like Alice in Wonderland, passing through the mirror into the new reality of Trump's second term.

In a motorcade, we raced through the streets of Washington, moving from event to event, including several inaugural balls. That night, returning triumphantly to the Oval Office, Mr. Trump answered the prayers of vigilantes by pardoning nearly all of the nearly 1,600 people convicted of breaking the law in connection with the Jan. 6 riot.

Pardons, a presidential power in the US Constitution, will prove to be a regular and controversial aspect of Trump's first year in office. The same could be said of many other defining features of this extraordinary period, from the massive layoffs initiated by his Department of Government Effectiveness to the widespread crackdown on immigration and the crippling tariffs imposed on nearly every U.S. trading partner. Mr Trump has also criticized major universities over alleged anti-Semitism.

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