| | | | | | By Adam Wren | | Presented by | | | | With help from Eli Okun, Garrett Ross and Bethany Irvine Good Saturday morning. Adam Wren here in Indianapolis. At 8 p.m. this evening, President Donald Trump departs Palm Beach International Airport en route to the Miami International Airport, and once on the ground, will arrive at the Kaseya Center at 8:55 p.m. where he will take in UFC 314. But as a Buckeye-born Hoosier, the real story this week is whether, after an invitation from Roger Penske, he’ll attend next month’s 109th running of the Indy 500 — the race that nearly canceled him as a pace car driver in 2011. It would be the most significant sign yet of his second term that he is now no longer persona non grata in popular culture, but welcomed at the largest single-day sporting event in the world. Drop me a line: awren@politico.com.
|  | DRIVING THE DAY | | | 
If the Democrats have two big lanes ahead of 2028 — the fighters and the conciliators — Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer perhaps has been the biggest example of the latter. | Mark Schiefelbein/AP Photo | When a photograph of Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer looking downcast in the Oval Office exploded this week, the hungry maw of social media all but suggested it doubled as a metaphor for some Democrats who haven’t yet figured out how to engage Trump amid his second term. Idling by the wall as Trump signed executive orders targeting former administration officials Chris Krebs and Miles Taylor, Whitmer looked powerless — and following the meeting, her office immediately issued a statement saying she had no idea she’d be in the Oval for a press event, and did not approve of the president’s actions. While some blue state governors such as JB Pritzker of Illinois and Tim Walz of Minnesota have more political runway to tangle with Trump, Whitmer and her Democratic gubernatorial colleagues are contending with difficult realities: Trump is still president, and he and his administration have shown a willingness to extract retribution on states when a governor crosses him. (Just ask Maine’s Janet Mills!) If Whitmer decides to run for president in 2028, that photo perhaps could come back to haunt her. But, according to a sweepy stepback on Democrats’ larger Trump predicament by The New York Times’ Reid Epstein and Tyler Pager out this morning, Whitmer has no regrets. “Public service is about putting the people of Michigan before my own interest,” Whitmer told the Times. “My job was to try to get help for people who were suffering as a result of the ice storm, to land more investment at Selfridge air base, to protect the Great Lakes and to fight for the auto industry. And that’s what I was doing.” If the Democrats have two big lanes ahead of 2028 — the fighters, who are unrelenting in their criticism of Trump, and the conciliators — Whitmer perhaps has been the biggest example of the latter. The Times outlines the conciliators — our word, not theirs — as including Whitmer, Gavin Newsom of California, Phil Murphy of New Jersey and Kathy Hochul of New York, who “have met with the president in the Oval Office, fielded his phone calls and toned down their language toward him.” Sure, these Democratic governors are still taking shots at Trump when it makes sense for them to do so — or when they believe he crosses a line. And it would be cynical to suggest every single one of their decisions is informed only by 2028 jockeying. But it is not 100 percent resistance, 100 percent of the time. It’s worth noting this week’s visit was actually the second White House meeting with Trump and Whitmer has had in less than a month (some have broken out the shadow primary into as many as four lanes). The first one went much better: Whitmer said at the time she discussed tariffs, the Great Lakes, and defense investments in the state, with no awkward drop in by the media.
| | | | A message from Comcast: Universal Epic Universe, the most technologically advanced theme park Comcast has built in the United States, is creating more American jobs and stimulating economic growth across the nation. Learn more about Comcast's multibillion dollar investment in the U.S. with the upcoming opening of Epic Universe. | | | | Did that initial meeting last month actually move the ball forward for Whitmer’s constituents? A person familiar with her thinking this morning texted Playbook and noted that Trump mentioned Selfridge Air National Guard Base this time around — as noted by the White House’s own rapid response account! — saying “we’re working on the Selfridge Air Base... I think we'll come home with a winner for Michigan.” (It’s worth noting that the base has an $850 million economic impact on the state.) “When you can bring jobs and investments back for your state, that’s a good thing,” the person close to Whitmer, who was granted anonymity to speak candidly, told Playbook. “She has been advocating personally for an investment in Selfridge Air National Guard Base, Great Lakes protection, and support for the auto industry.” The person also pointed to her management of the fallout from Trump pausing tariffs — an issue she felt she needed to continue to educate Trump on, with one in five jobs in her home state connected to the auto industry — the day she visited. That’s not to mention speaking to him about the northern Michigan ice storms. “This governor has won one of the most politically competitive states in the country twice, by enormous margins (10% -11% each time), even flipping Trump counties when people thought it couldn’t be done (Selfridge is in one of those counties, Macomb),” this person told Playbook. “She knows what she’s doing as she stands up for Michiganders.” Colorado Gov. Jared Polis, another purple state governor, extolled HHS Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. as someone who “helped us defeat vaccine mandates in Colorado,” even as he later posted in defense of vaccines. Polis also this week found an opportunity to contrast with Whitmer on tariffs. Responding to Whitmer’s remarks that she’s “not against tariffs outright,” Polis called them “bad outright because they lead to higher prices and destroy American manufacturing.” “Governor Polis has said he’d work with the administration when it’s in Colorado’s interest and push back when it isn’t, like with these dangerous tariffs,” Conor Cahill, a spokesperson for Polis, told Playbook. “It’s important for any governor to work with the federal government, because so many different state ideas that are important to residents are funded by, run by, or have rules set by the federal government from the Small Business Administration to college loans.” But the spokesperson added: “Democrats are united against the President’s and Republicans' efforts to raise costs on groceries for Americans and rip away health care through Medicaid cuts.” One purple state governor who has managed to avoid Trump’s landmines while not angering his base — at least thus far — is Pennsylvania Gov. Josh Shapiro, taking something of a third way. “I think it is a false choice to suggest you need either or — either you need that resistance, that fight, that opposition, or you need to find ways to compromise and come together,” Shapiro told HBO’s Bill Maher recently. That’s a fine line many of Trump’s opponents will be trying to walk over the next four years. Just ask Maher: the sometimes caustic critic of Trump broke bread with the president recently — in a meeting brokered by mutual friend Kid Rock — because “there’s got to be something better than hurling insults from 3,000 miles away.”
| | | | A message from Comcast:  From 2019-2023, Universal Orlando generated $44 billion in economic impact for the nation. Learn more. | | | | 9 THINGS THAT STUCK WITH US 1. WHAT YOU DON’T SEE ON TV: One of the clearest divides three months into Trump’s second presidency is the messaging that his administration officials trumpet in public (largely on television) versus what they say in the courtroom. “In court, lawyers and administration officials often try to minimize the impact of the administration’s most controversial actions and paint them as firmly within legal bounds. Their careful, sworn statements are a sharp contrast with Trump’s unfettered public messaging as he pushes the limits of executive power,” POLITICO’s Jessica Piper, Myah Ward and Kyle Cheney write. The latest case: In a win for Trump’s immigration crackdown playing out in the courts, an immigration judge in Louisiana ruled yesterday that Mahmoud Khalil, the Columbia University graduate student who was arrested for participating in pro-Palestinian protests, can be deported, AP’s Sara Cline and Kate Brumback write. “The government’s contention that Khalil’s presence in the U.S. posed ‘potentially serious foreign policy consequences’ satisfied requirements for deportation,” the immigration judge said. Khalil’s attorney said he will appeal the decision in the coming weeks. 2. THE ART OF THE DEAL: As the Trump administration embarks on a dizzying set of negotiations over a 90-day pause of the president’s so-called reciprocal tariffs, foreign diplomats are staring down a “mess” of a situation, POLITICO’s Daniel Desrochers, Ari Hawkins, Phelim Kine, Megan Messerly and Felicia Schwartz report. Thus far, Trump has opened himself up to just a handful of serious negotiations — with Vietnam, India, South Korea and Japan — “prioritizing existing trading partners that are strategic to countering China,” they write. Taking the temp: “A POLITICO survey of more than 15 countries, including five key Asian trading partners, suggested confusion about the administration’s approach. ‘We really don’t know what the Trump administration wants,’ said one diplomat from an Asian country, who is close to the negotiations. … ‘We’ve been told literally nothing,’ said another official representing an Asian country. They said the lack of clarity from the administration suggests a deal-making process that’s ‘reactive, with no clear direction.’” Neighbors to the north: Robert Lighthizer, one of Trump’s original aggressive trade advisers, is giving out advice to Canadians, telling a conference of conservatives yesterday “that their country can help mend the tattered relationship by spending more on defense, helping the White House deal with China and negotiating a new North American free trade deal,” POLITICO’s Mike Blanchfield reports from Ottawa. The man with the plan: Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent is the one taking the lead for the administration in all things trade, giving Wall Street hope that one of their own can deliver positive results in the end, WSJ’s Gregory Zuckerman, Josh Dawsey and Alexander Saeedy write. “For now, Bessent’s status in the administration is on the rise. One senior official described him as an ‘adult in the room,’ saying he has gained favor with the president.” Phoning it in: The White House late last night published a rule that “appears to exempt many electronic parts and devices from most of the president’s punishing tariffs on China, including smartphones and computers,” per the NYT. The stepback: “How One of the Wildest Weeks in Market History Unfolded,” by WSJ’s Ryan Dezember and Sam Goldfarb 3. IMMIGRATION FILES: Elon Musk’s top DOGE lieutenants have pushed the government efficiency effort’s influence “deep inside the nation’s immigration system,” embedding at DHS, marking a “significant expansion” and a real test of how far DOGE’s portfolio can reach, POLITICO’s Sophia Cai reports. “Antonio Gracias, a Musk confidante whose history with the billionaire goes back more than 20 years, is quietly heading up a specialized DOGE immigration task force that’s embedded engineers and staffers across nearly every nook of the Department of Homeland Security. … The task force is also working with DOGE operatives stationed at other agencies like the Social Security Administration and the Department of Health and Human Services, which house sensitive data on undocumented immigrants.” Land grab: Last night, Trump noticed that a “60-foot wide strip of land along three southwestern border states will be placed under the jurisdiction of the U.S. military to help deter illegal immigration,” POLITICO’s Myah Ward reports. “The order would empower troops to detain people attempting to illegally enter the U.S. within the stretch of land, which was established by President Theodore Roosevelt for border security in 1907.” Prison play: A group of defense contractors, led by former Blackwater CEO Erik Prince, “are pitching the White House on a plan to vastly expand deportations to El Salvador — transporting thousands of immigrants from U.S. holding facilities to a sprawling maximum security prison in Central America,” POLITICO’s Dasha Burns and Myah Ward scoop. The proposal obtained by POLITICO “says it would target ‘criminal illegal aliens’ and would attempt to avoid legal challenges by designating part of the prison — which has drawn accusations of violence and overcrowding from human rights groups — as American territory.”
| | | | POLITICO IS BACK AT THE 2025 MILKEN GLOBAL CONFERENCE: From May 4–7, California Playbook will deliver exclusive, on-the-ground coverage from the 28th Annual Milken Institute Global Conference. Get behind-the-scenes buzz, standout moments, and insights from leaders in AI, finance, health, philanthropy, geopolitics, and more. Subscribe now for your front-row seat to the conversations shaping our world. | | | | | 4. THE LIMITS OF TRUMPISM: Canadian Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre had deployed a modern, social-media-savvy, viral clip-producing, anti-traditional media strategy to build an impressive lead in Canada’s elections. His efforts earned him some props from the American right, who see something both refined and Trumpian in his delivery. But Poilievre’s strategy has landed him in some trouble amid Trump’s threats toward Canada, as he tries to navigate how to disavow Trump while maintaining his forceful media strategy. “The same attitude that engendered Poilievre’s ascent is now contributing to the dimming of his electoral prospects,” POLITICO’s Calder McHugh writes in a must-read profile of the would-be prime minister. Mood music: “Canadians freeze visits to the US over Trump,” by POLITICO’s Emily Ngo 5. FOR YOUR RADAR: “Iran and US agree to more talks over Tehran’s nuclear program after 1st round in Oman,” by AP’s Jon Gambrell: “Iran and the United States will hold more negotiations next week over Tehran’s rapidly advancing nuclear program, Iranian state television reported Saturday at the end of the first round of talks between the two countries since President Donald Trump returned to the White House. Iranian state TV said U.S. Mideast envoy Steve Witkoff and Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi ‘briefly spoke in the presence of the Omani foreign minister’ at the end of the talks, marking a direct interaction between the two nations locked in decades of tensions.” Walking the line: Witkoff told WSJ’s Josh Dawsey, Michael Gordon and Laurence Norman ahead of Saturday’s talks that the “‘red line’ with Iran is to stop it from being able to produce a nuclear weapon,” adding that “the administration’s opening demand would be that Tehran eliminate its nuclear program, but he conceded that compromises might be needed to reach a deal.” 6. WHAT RFK JR. SAID: Kennedy made a visit to the FDA yesterday for an appearance billed as an introduction of the new leader. But the remarks from the controversial Kennedy scion left staffers “jolted” — with several walking out of the rooms where the speech was broadcast, POLITICO’s Adam Cancryn, Lauren Gardner and David Lim report. “Over the course of 40 minutes, Kennedy, in largely off-the-cuff remarks, asserted that the ‘Deep State’ is real, referenced past CIA experiments on human mind control and accused the employees he was speaking to of becoming a ‘sock puppet’ of the industries they regulate.” Delay delay delay: Meanwhile, Kennedy is set to testify before the House Energy and Commerce Committee on HHS’ budget in the coming weeks, but officials at the agency told the committee he “might not be able to speak on his department’s sweeping overhaul,” POLITICO’s Ben Leonard reports. HHS officials argued in a closed-door briefing with the panel that “because of the sweeping reduction in force — which aims to cut 10,000 of the department’s workers — Kennedy won’t be able to discuss the matter for 60 days,” citing OPM statutes. About those cuts: “RFK Jr. wants to target chronic disease in US tribes. A key program to do that was gutted,” by AP’s Devna Bose, Graham Lee Brewer and Becky Bohrer 7. IN THE DOGE HOUSE: DOGE employees have now “inserted themselves” into and tweaked the process of grants.gov, “a federal website that has traditionally served as a clearinghouse for more than $500 billion in annual awards and is used by thousands of outside organizations,” WaPo’s Dan Diamond, Hannah Natanson and Carolyn Johnson report. “The changes to the process — which will allow DOGE to review and approve proposed grant opportunities across the federal government — threaten to further delay or even halt billions of dollars that agencies usually make in federal awards.” Dead space: The Trump administration recently overrode objections inside the Social Security Administration to “add thousands of immigrants ranging in age from teenagers to octogenarians to the agency’s Death Master File,” essentially wiping out their ability to earn a wage in an effort that the White House hoped would lead immigrants to leave the country, WaPo’s Hannah Natanson, Lisa Rein and Meryl Kornfield report. “Experts in government, consumer rights and immigration law said the administration’s action is illegal. Labeling people dead strips them of the privacy protections granted to living individuals — and knowingly classifying living people as dead counts as falsifying government records, they said.” Related read: “Musk’s Latest Fraud Finding Isn’t What It Seems,” by NYT’s Emily Badger: “His team found cases of seemingly fake people receiving unemployment benefits. But that fake data exists for a reason.” 8. TALES FROM THE CRYPTO: “Binance Seeks to Curb U.S. Oversight While in Deal Talks With Trump’s Crypto Company,” by WSJ’s Angus Berwick, Patricia Kowsmann and Rebecca Ballhaus: “Binance executives asked Treasury officials in Washington to remove a U.S. monitor that oversees the exchange’s compliance with anti-money-laundering laws … The move would mark a first step toward returning the company, which in 2023 pleaded guilty to violating those laws, to the U.S. market. Binance has also been in talks to list a new dollar-pegged cryptocurrency from World Liberty Financial, a crypto venture backed by President Trump’s family … Listing the token, known as a stablecoin, could catapult it into a huge market and potentially bring in billions in profit for the family.” 9. THE NEXT FRONT TO COUNTER CHINA?: “African Breakaway State Offers U.S. a Chance to Stick It to China,” by NYT’s Abdi Latif Dahir: “Somaliland has its own currency and passport, as well as control over its foreign and military affairs. It has held several widely praised independent elections. Now, it wants to make a deal with President Trump in which the United States would lease both the port and the airstrip in exchange for long-awaited statehood. Gaining an endorsement from the most powerful country in the world, Somalilanders say, would bring global investment and broader diplomatic and security ties. But some analysts fear that recognizing Somaliland could disrupt the region.”
| | | | A message from Comcast:  94K jobs created by Universal Orlando just in 2023. Learn more. | | | | CLICKER — “The nation’s cartoonists on the week in politics,” edited by Matt Wuerker — 17 funnies
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Jack Ohman-Tribune Content Agency | GREAT WEEKEND READS: — “This Is the Holocaust Story I Said I Wouldn’t Write,” by NYT Magazine’s Taffy Brodesser-Akner: “For years, my friend’s father asked me to recount his childhood escape from the Nazis. Why did it take me this long?” — “The Brazilian Judge Taking On the Digital Far Right,” by The New Yorker’s Jon Lee Anderson: “Alexandre de Moraes’s efforts to fight extremism online have pitted him against Jair Bolsonaro, Elon Musk, and Donald Trump.” — “I Should Have Seen This Coming,” by The Atlantic’s David Brooks: “When I joined the conservative movement in the 1980s, there were two types of people: those who cared earnestly about ideas, and those who wanted only to shock the left. The reactionary fringe has won.” — “U.S. fentanyl deaths have been plunging. Enter Trump,” by Reuters’ Maurice Tamman, Laura Gottesdiener and Kristina Cooke: “The U.S. has recorded a historic drop in overdose deaths. The Trump administration’s campaign to slash spending and reduce the federal workforce could reverse this fragile progress, public health experts say.” — “In Trump’s Washington, MAGA fashionistas lay claim to American hotness,” by WaPo’s Kara Voght: “At a party thrown by a conservative lifestyle publication, an ‘objectively beautiful lifestyle’ and an ‘objectively superior worldview’ go hand in hand.” — “Who Wants to Run Vanity Fair? Everyone? Anyone?” by NYT’s Katie Robertson and Jessica Testa: “Radhika Jones is stepping down as editor in chief, and the search for her replacement has begun. But as the magazine industry has contracted, many of the more decadent parts of the job are long gone.” — “They Went to the Masters. They Ditched Their Cellphones. Then the Markets Went Completely Crazy,” by WSJ’s Andrew Beaton: “Augusta National is one of the last places on Earth where fans are forced to disconnect, leaving finance bros in the dark about Wednesday’s market drama.”
| | | | Cut through policy complexity and turn intelligence into action with POLITICO’s Policy Intelligence Assistant—a new suite of tools designed to save you time and demonstrate your impact more easily than ever—available only to Pro subscribers. Save hours, uncover critical insights instantly, and stay ahead of the next big shift. Power your strategy today—learn more. | | | | | |  | TALK OF THE TOWN | | The White House appears to have replaced an image of Barack Obama with a portrait of the aftermath of the assassination attempt against Donald Trump. Alicia Menendez and Eugene Daniels were honored with Voto Latino’s “Our Voices” awards. OUT AND ABOUT — GMMB, GSG and Ampersand hosted hundreds of politicos, organizers and progressive leaders at their America Votes closing happy hour yesterday. SPOTTED: Sam Newton, Kelly Dupree, Melissa Williams, Shripal Shah, Jessica Floyd, Allyson Marcus, Veronica Ingham, Shwetika Baijal, Lucy Ritzmann, Maeve Coyle, CJ Warnke, Chris Harris, John Rimel, Anson Kaye, Jesse Demastrie, Jodi Quintero, Erica Monteith, Andrew Zucker, Valentina Perez, Jefrey Pollock, Angela Kuefler, Matt Canter, Rosa Mendoza, Mario Brossard, Katie Drapcho, Tim Kay and Jeff Haigney. — Mayra Macias, Javier Gamboa and Susana Parra, Latino staffers from Building Back Together, hosted the first-ever “Chingonas and Champagne Brunch” celebrating the contributions of Latinas shaping policy, politics, philanthropy and media. Honorees included Carmen Rojas, Emmy Ruiz, Lori Montenegro, Rocío Sáenz and Xenia Ruiz. SPOTTED: Natalie Montelongo, Yvonne Gutierrez, Artie Blanco, Johanny Adames, Angela Ramirez, Carmen Perez, Aileen Cardona-Arroyo, Anais Carmona, Pete Maysmith, Yadira Sanchez , Sindy Benavides, Zuraya Tapia-Hadley, Daysi Gonzales, Andrea Mercado, Becky Wasserman, Rosa Mendoza, Nancy Juarez, Maria Teresa Kumar, Janet Murguía, Monica Garay, Leo Muñoz, Miguel Franco and Andrea Flores. — Wilfred Frost, son of David Frost and executive producer of the new six-part MSNBC Films documentary series “David Frost vs,” held a screening at the Crosby Street Hotel in New York last night, with a Q&A moderated by CNBC’s Sara Eisen. SPOTTED: Ron Howard, Mark Lazarus and David Rhodes. Pic TRANSITIONS — Steven Gordon is now head of engineering at Rise Digital Properties. He previously was voter protection senior associate for election administration for Kamala Harris’ campaign and is a Slack alum. … Wendy Chun-Hoon will be president and executive director of the Center for Law and Social Policy. She most recently was director of the Women’s Bureau in the Labor Department under the Biden administration. HAPPY BIRTHDAY: Playbook’s own Callan Tansill-Suddath … DNI Tulsi Gabbard … Reps. Tim Walberg (R-Mich.) and Chuy García (D-Ill.) … Fred Ryan … Christian Datoc … Mindy Myers ... Brad Elkins ... Rita Braver ... Jack Pandol Jr. … Katherine Rodriguez of DoorDash ... Gretchen Andersen … Sindy Benavides … POLITICO’s Yohannes Gurmu … Anthony Bellmon … Peter Scher of JPMorgan Chase … Corry Robb … Laly Rivera Perez … Nick Iacovella … National Student Legal Defense Network’s Aaron Ament … Audra McGeorge … Chris Gorud of Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse’s (D-R.I.) office ... Reed Galen … Shalla Ross … Carrie Camillo … AARP’s Timothy Gearan … CNN’s Greg Clary … Woody Johnson … Eric Leckey … Zach Weidlich of Rep. Jerry Carl’s (R-Ala.) office THE SHOWS (Full Sunday show listings here): Fox News “Sunday Morning Futures”: Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth … Stephen Miller … Speaker Mike Johnson … Reza Pahlavi. NBC “Meet the Press”: Peter Navarro … Sen. Cory Booker (D-N.J.) … Ray Dalio. Panel: Kimberly Atkins Stohr, Carlos Curbelo, Jonathan Martin and Kelly O’Donnell. ABC “This Week”: Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick … Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) … Stephen A. Smith. Panel: Donna Brazile, Reince Priebus, Rachael Bade and Sarah Isgur. CNN “State of the Union”: Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) … National Economic Council Director Kevin Hassett. Panel: Rep. Tim Burchett (R-Tenn.), Susan Wild, Brad Todd and Ashley Allison. CBS “Face the Nation”: USTR Jamieson Greer … Rep. Ro Khanna (D-Calif.) … Neel Kashkari … Peter Marks … Anthony Salvanto. FOX “Fox News Sunday”: Agriculture Secretary Brooke Rollins … Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker … Sen. James Lankford (R-Okla.). Panel: Susan Page, Juan Williams and Doug Heye. Sunday special: Ken and Brad McCauley. NewsNation “The Hill Sunday”: Sen. Ron Johnson (R-Wis.) … Rep. Gabe Amo (D-R.I.). Think tank panel: Navin Nayak and Robert Doar. Panel: Dave Weigel, Noah Rothman, Tia Mitchell and David Swerdlick. Did someone forward this email to you? Sign up here. Send Playbookers tips to playbook@politico.com or text us at 202-556-3307. Playbook couldn’t happen without our deputy editor Zack Stanton and Playbook Daily Briefing producer Callan Tansill-Suddath.
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