On Tuesday, a sprawling two-part Vanity Fair piece built from more than a dozen interviews with Susie Wiles, President Trump’s chief of staff, dropped online. It is, without exaggeration, one of the most revealing portraits of an active White House power broker I can remember. Wiles describes Trump as having an “alcoholic’s personality,” a striking characterization given his lifelong teetotalism. Trump, notably, did not dispute it. He later confirmed the description himself, calling it aggressive, possessive, and myopic.
Wiles also took shots across the bow at several major figures. She labeled Elon Musk an “odd duck,” dismissed his politics, and triggered a very public response that included Musk taking a drug test near my own neighborhood to rebut claims of ketamine use. She endorsed JD Vance as the likely Republican nominee in 2028 while simultaneously describing his MAGA conversion as politically convenient. On Epstein, she confirmed Trump’s name appears in the files, contradicted Trump’s claims about Bill Clinton, and slammed Attorney General Pam Bondi’s handling of the document release as a total failure. These were not slips. They were deliberate disclosures from someone who understands power intimately.
Perhaps most telling was Wiles’s admission that some Trump-era prosecutions look vindictive and that Venezuelan boat strikes were intended to pressure Nicolás Maduro politically, not just disrupt drug trafficking. That level of candor is rare. It reframes policy decisions as leverage rather than law enforcement, and it explains why the article landed like a grenade inside Republican circles.
A Cooling Jobs Market and a Complicated Economic Pitch
Away from the media drama, the November jobs report offered something for everyone but reassurance. Payrolls grew by 64,000 jobs, better than feared but far from robust. Unemployment climbed to 4.6 percent, the highest level in more than four years, signaling a labor market that is cooling but not collapsing. The Labor Department flagged unusual data uncertainty due to the government shutdown, muddying trend lines even further.
Supporters of the administration argue that private sector employment remains solid and that government job losses were inevitable given debt and deficits. Critics counter that Trump ran as the “economy man,” and this is not an economy that inspires confidence. Manufacturing and professional services continue to contract, while gains are concentrated in health care and education. The Fed’s recent rate cut looks justified, but the promised “golden age” is difficult to sell when affordability remains front and center for voters.
A Prime-Time Address and the Politics of the Moment
All of this sets the stage for Trump’s prime-time address from the White House, scheduled for Wednesday night. Officially, there is no news hook. Unofficially, this looks like a straight-to-camera year-in-review and year-ahead speech, a nakedly political address designed to reset the narrative as he approaches the midpoint of his second term. If there were a major announcement, such as a Russia-Ukraine breakthrough or a stimulus package, it would not stay secret. The absence of leaks suggests there is no surprise coming.
At the same time, Speaker Mike Johnson is facing an internal revolt over expiring Affordable Care Act subsidies. Moderates in swing districts are desperate for a vote they can point to, even if it fails. Hardliners insist on abortion-related restrictions tied to the Hyde Amendment, and leadership is frozen. With discharge petitions circulating and Trump’s own political strength under scrutiny, Johnson’s power is only as strong as Trump’s grip on the conference. Right now, that grip looks uncertain.
Chapters
00:00:00 - Intro
00:01:23 - Susie Wiles in Vanity Fair
00:04:49 - Kirk Bado on Susie Wiles
00:35:30 - Update
00:37:14 - Jobs Report
00:39:43 - Trump’s Primetime Address Announcement
00:44:04 - Mike Johnson and the ACA
00:50:37 - Kirk Bado on Nuzzi/Lizza and More
01:13:57 - Wrap-up










