Trump's Vile Rants About 'Fat Black Women': Wolff episode artwork

EPISODE · Aug 24, 2025 · 35 MIN

Trump's Vile Rants About 'Fat Black Women': Wolff

from The Daily Beast Podcast · host The Daily Beast, Joanna Coles

Michael Wolff, author of four bestselling books on Donald Trump, joins the Daily Beast’s executive editor, Hugh Doherty, to dissect the former president’s expanding enemies list. From the FBI raid on John Bolton’s home to Trump’s fixation on Black female prosecutors and judges, Wolff lays bare how Trump’s hostility toward Black women has become a defining and pathological theme of his politics. They also dig into the newly released Jeffrey Epstein files—what’s inside, what’s missing, and why Trump’s allies are scrambling to contain the fallout. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

Michael Wolff, author of four bestselling books on Donald Trump, joins the Daily Beast’s executive editor, Hugh Doherty, to dissect the former president’s expanding enemies list. From the FBI raid on John Bolton’s home to Trump’s fixation on Black female prosecutors and judges, Wolff lays bare how Trump’s hostility toward Black women has become a defining and pathological theme of his politics. They also dig into the newly released Jeffrey Epstein files—what’s inside, what’s missing, and why Trump’s allies are scrambling to contain the fallout. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

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Trump's Vile Rants About 'Fat Black Women': Wolff

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Epstein is a problem, it could in fact be a mortal problem, so we have to do anything to frustrate that story continuing on. Where we are in that story is that Congress has insisted on seeing some aspects of these so-called Epstein files. So the question is, there's two questions, what are they going to get? And actually, a continuing question never answered is what is in these files?

Welcome to the Daily Beast podcast. I'm Hugh Doggity. I'm back sitting in for Joanna Coles here at Daily Beast HQ in Manhattan. I'm Executive Editor of the Daily Beast and yes, this is my Scottish accent.

For anyone struggling to understand, I will be in the comments later to translate. So, happy weekend and what a week in the life of America dominated of course by who else but Donald Trump. There's so much to talk about and cover and today we are going to go through a law and order special President's unit with the incomparable Michael Wolfe. He is not just the author of four best selling books about Donald Trump, but also twice every week he guides us into that very dark place he knows all too well on our new mustless and podcast inside Trump's heads.

Michael, welcome. Thank you for taking time away from bringing light to the dark interior that is Trump's head to be with us now. Michael, thank you for joining us this morning, taking time away from that dark place that we know as Donald Trump's head where you are twice a week, you are inside Trump's head, but you're taking a slight amount of time out to be with us this morning. I'm visiting others in the neighborhood.

I wanted to start this morning with a really dramatic development at the home of John Bolton. Donald Trump's former National Security Advisor has been raided by the FBI. Michael, how much does Donald Trump hate John Bolton? Well, quite a bit, but Donald Trump hates a lot of people quite a bit, which is actually the larger danger here.

It's not just John Bolton. It's anybody who Donald Trump hates. So anyone who has crossed Trump is now, and I think of this sense of signal, and there's so much about what's going on in the White House now about sending signals who's being sued, who's being investigated, who's being searched now. And so the FBI went in with a search warrant to John Bolton's house.

Basically, the message is the FBI can go into anybody's house. So far, in this second administration, what we have seen on a steady basis is an escalation of whatever name you want to apply to this. I hesitate to apply these names because they're so overused, authoritarianism, despotism, fascism. Let's not go there, and let's just say that we are in an utterly unique moment.

The President of the United States has, is using the power of his office to intimidate, to punish, to investigate, to chill. I wanted to talk not just about John Bolton because the feds turning up in the doorstep of a formerly very senior national security figure is one thing, but there's been all sorts of enemies going after this week. And one was Tish James, who's pretty well known. She's a Tony General of New York, and she led efforts to investigate Donald Trump when he was out of office.

But another one is Lisa Cook, and she's a member of the Board of Federal Reserve Governors, and she too has been investigated. And what do they have in common? I mean, kind of a double thing going on here. I mean, he has chosen to focus his ire on the Federal Reserve because they have been reluctant to lower interest rates.

Now, just understand where the Federal Reserve fits in, in this. The Federal Reserve has rightly had a remarkable amount of independence because its job is not political, its job is economic. And it has, that has been a very, very, very crucial distinction. We don't run the economy on the basis of whatever partisan issues.

We run the economy on the basis of economics, numbers, of the complicated formulas that are necessary to maintain economic stability. Trump, clearly, in everything he's done, has been out to change that. He wants the Federal Reserve under his thumb, under his dominance. He wants to dictate economic policy.

So again, we're back into the words, authoritarianism, fascism, whatever the words are. Of course you were trying to stay away from it. We are outside the bounds of traditional good government. And at any rate, the Fed Chairman has been subjected to almost daily insults from Trump, and an obvious effort to get him to resign.

And now he's focused his ire on this other member, the Federal Reserve Board, this Lisa Cook. Now, it is also impossible, speaking of Laetitia James, also speaking there, to ignore the fact that Lisa Cook is the first black Fed governor. First of all, a female Fed governor, we should say. Yeah, sorry.

I spent the last two years, more than two years, deeply involved with Trump's campaign. This is reflected in my book All or Nothing. And one of the motifs that was pervasive in the campaign was Trump's attitude toward black women. And this was partly had to do with all of his legal difficulties with Tisha James in New York, Fannie Willis, the prosecutor in Atlanta, Tanya Chuckkin, the judge over the January 6 case in Washington.

These were all black women. And this became, for Trump, this had particular and special meaning. Black women were coming after him. And that shortly became in his rendition of this as fat black women.

I mean, that was almost connected. You can, the animus, the personal animus here, the personal revulsion on Trump's par, the personal fear, I suppose, that he continued to express. This was essentially on a daily basis. People around him would call me up and say, up, another fat black women tirade on Trump's par.

So again, we're in an entirely new world here. I mean, this is obviously, this is obviously racism, but this is obvious, I want to go beyond that and say this is an obvious pathology. It's an obsession of his. It lives, you know, one of the, one of his staffers said, said to me, he must dream about fat black women.

So again, and you know, this is inside Trump's head, there is something going on there that is deep, sinister, dark, pervasive, and we might, not that long ago, have thought that it was something eliminated from American government. We had been cured of this disease, which for so long, infected American government and many, many American politicians. But for three generations now, it had seemed like, well, that we were, we had, that was a central American accomplishment. We were over that.

We had cleansed ourselves of that. And we are back to that, back to this to a profoundly, in some sense a strictly racial point of view. And I just point out to those who have not listened to the last edition of Inside Trump's head, you rightly pointed out that Roger Ailes had described to the viewership that he was seeking to read his people as before the Voting Rights Act. And I just urge everybody to go back to Inside Trump's head, subscribe, it is a really important point.

It's worth repeating because I think that it is fundamental. Roger Ailes, the founder of Fox News, the leader of Fox News for 20 years, and someone I knew very well once said to me, actually in 2016, as Donald Trump was running for president, he said to me, you and the president. You and the people you know, you, you live today. You live in this year, 2016.

He said, my people, the people who watch Fox News, they live in, he said 1965. And then with a kind of wink, he said before the Voting Rights Act. And, and, and he went on to make a further, further point, which was that, you know, that culture moved at different speeds. And the people I knew were the people who knew people live in New York or however you might, you might describe, describe us.

We were at the forefront of the speed of culture's speed, but that a great deal of the country was in, for a great deal of the country, culture moved at a much slower pace. And that was for him, a programming point of view. I'm making programming television for people who think like this. But at the bottom of it, it also contained a racial point of view.

That, that here was a population that was not, had not participated or had not much participated in this historic, great historic achievement, certainly from our point of view, of the last three generations. And I think it's worth talking about the first Trump administration. These instincts managed to be toned down, or at least not acted on quite as actively because people around Trump were less prone to, to following all his demands. And this time, we've got this kind of odd squad that's out there, who got Cash Patel, who apparently ordered the raid on John Bolton and certainly taking credit for it on social media.

We've got, going up against Tish James, Ed Martin, Jr, who wears a Burberry raincoat, inspired by Colombo, who, rather bizarrely, is great, great uncle. That was an actor who played Colombo before he died, long before this guy could possibly have met him. And at the root of the mortgage for all the allegations for both Tish James and he's a cook. You've got Bill Pouty, Jr, who's a construction nepobaby, who has become the head of the Federal Housing Finance Agency.

Let's understand that there is no policy here. What is going on here is just the effort to please Donald Trump. There is. This runs only from one way.

What do we have to do to please Donald Trump? Everyone in the Trump administration exists. Their careers are dependent on their daily lives, ruled by what Trump wants. There is no, nobody has any independence here, zero, zero, zero, in which is finishing with the Federal Reserve.

From Trump's point of view, no one should have any independence. He runs the place. Michael, hold that thought. We are just going to take some messages.

And we are back with Michael Wolfe. So do these people, as I say, all at school, I'd have cash, but tell, and Ed Martin, Jr, and Bill Pouty, Jr, and so many others, Pam Blunde, obviously somebody who's had to authorize the Department of Justice to move on each of those people. Do they take orders or do they? There is no authorization.

The authorization comes from the President of the United States. So that idea, an idea that was well-grained in American government, that the Justice Department was at arm's length from the West Wing and from the President. It was independent. The whole idea of independence in government.

A foundational modern premise has gone, has been wiped out in the seven months of the Second Trump administration. Just as a practical, do they go to Trump with these plans? Or do they execute them and seek to please him? Well, I say, it's both.

He is literally on the phone. Or they may well get their own idea and then we'll go to him, like a dog with a bone. And he'll say, yeah, that's great. We were talking about the theme of the talk of the show.

I introduced it saying it was a law and order, special President's unit. And with the other flip side of law and order, the John Bolton raid was just in the morning that the first of the Epstein files were due to be transmitted from Pambolian Justice Department to the House of Representatives. It looks a bit like a distraction. Is it that simple?

What exactly looks like a distraction? To raid John Bolton's house. Yes, but I don't anticipate. No, I don't think we should look at it just like that.

I think this is part of a concerted effort to intimidate all perceived enemies of the president. If you are perceived as an enemy of the president, then the policy is we're going to make your life difficult. That's it. That's the policy.

Additionally, yes, it has the cream on top, I suppose, of being another headline to counter the Epstein headlines. I mean, that is also a foundational premise at this point. Epstein is a problem. It could in fact be a mortal problem.

So we have to do anything to frustrate that story continuing on. Now, where we are in that story is that Congress has insisted on seeing some aspects of these so-called Epstein files. So the question is, what are the two questions? What are they going to get?

Actually, a continuing question never answered is what is in these files? So why don't we just spend a few moments actually trying to parse that? Because that's going to be germane to what Congress gets. So these files, let's do this in a broader sense.

The material the government holds on Jeffrey Epstein will consist of the following. There will be depositions supplied by the many, many women who have accused Epstein of sexual abuse. And most of that material has already been made public. Then there will be the FBI's own investigation of those women.

And it's not all of those women. It's the women that they have chosen for whatever reason to investigate or that you might say. And we suggest that they investigate, they are looking for any issues with these women, but they are looking to further delve beyond their own depositions into what they might know, into what kind of witnesses they might make. And from the MAGA point of view, that aspect of this could be problematic because many of these, the FBI may have found issues with some of these women to challenge their credibility.

So from the MAGA point of view, to complicate the story in any way is something that the administration, a box that the administration does not want to open. The next aspect of this, which is to me one of the most interesting aspects, is the internal communications in the Justice Department about why they made the decision in 2019 to forsake the non-prosecution agreement they entered into with Epstein in 2007. This is a complicated deal, but a big deal. Never before in the history of the Justice Department, a non-prosecution agreement is a common method used, either to get people to testify or in Epstein's case the agreement was put in place because the feds said we won't prosecute you if you plead guilty to a state charge.

There is a signed seal that was the agreement. These agreements are never broken for obvious reasons because if the Justice Department breaks them, who would have agreed to them. But they did in this instance. And the question is, is what caused them to do that?

Why, what pressure was brought to bear? Because he knew Epstein was out there. He was obviously talking to you. Yes.

Exactly. Epstein had started to talk. Yes. But the other consideration might well be that it was the Southern District of New York, part of the Justice Department, but with a long history of its own independence.

We all know as the Sovereign District, if people have watched billions in other shows, they've seen one of the most powerful prosecutorial jobs in the country traditionally has been the Manhattan Federal Prosecutor. And we know that the Southern District was at that time investigating Donald Trump. As a matter of fact, many people in the Southern District have been fired in the Second Administration because of that reason. So did the Southern District, did they break their non-prosecution agreement in the hope of leveraging Jeffrey Epstein to deliver evidence about Donald Trump?

That's just another aspect of what's going to be in these files. And quite likely a key area that the President Trump White House does not want exposed. Then the other aspect of this would be Jeffrey Epstein's emails. The FBI went into his house, took his computers, obviously the emails are there.

Those emails will likely implicate a vast number of other people who have not yet been connected to Jeffrey Epstein. They will also expose who Jeffrey Epstein was talking to on a frequent daily basis in the Second Trump Administration. And also what Trump friends Epstein was talking about. And of course, what are the things that he was talking to them about was Donald Trump.

And we will be right back after these messages with Michael Wolfe. And we are back with Michael Wolfe talking about who else but Donald Trump. One of the things that we all remember became known as Epstein's Black Book. And it was this collection of phone numbers that really stopped in somewhere around I believe 2007 or 8.

I used to have a copy on my desk. It was actually very useful for those for finding numbers for famous people. But that's the last we knew. And this is like a whole new treasure trove.

As I have tried to point out many, many, many times in the cascade of Epstein information and the truths in quotation marks that have developed, that black book was not Jeffrey Epstein's Black Book. That was Galenites. Anyway, but the emails will be a black book. And he was, I assume he was a prolific emailer because he was well connected.

Yeah, I mean, everybody is a prolific emailer. It turns out. But Donald Trump, who is a prolific social media, he doesn't even need to email direct. No, good point.

But then the other category would be just what is on Epstein's computer. Yes. His hard drive, which would give a roadmap to many of the financial questions about Jeffrey Epstein. And also, likely, certainly from what I know about Epstein, to connect him and his financial dealings to various regimes around the world, which may be a little bit more likely.

And then he would be able to connect him and he would be able to connect him to the world, which might be compromised or even destabilized by this connection to Epstein. So to come back, and I apologize for the long digression here, but I think it is helpful to have an idea of what the government has in its hands. So to come back to what the, what Congress will be getting, I suspect that all they will be getting is the rehash of the depositions supplied by the many women who have accused Epstein of sexual abuse, much of which in some form or another we have already seen. And which we know because we have seen them contain really very few ticking time bombs.

Yeah. Mostly it is. We will rehash the information we have already had about Jeffrey Epstein. And we should say that, of course, that information is horrific and it's a systematic and predation on women.

Yeah, but even that would be part of the distraction. Yes. And I would say something that's pretty interesting. Look at this.

And this is, you know, we'll rehash again. It's the rehash. We're going to replay what we know without going on to what we don't know, which is the point of this exercise. Yes.

I'll just say from the point of view, the Daily Beast first ran stories about this back in 2011. And those stories were about the abuse that Jeffrey Epstein committed despite a really critical. Those stories also were based on these depositions. Exactly.

And the point about these depositions, I mean, one of the points is that they were, they're depositions. So they represent necessarily, there's nobody's cross-examined here. This is lawyers make a case. And these lawyers who got paid an enormous amount of money to make this case have made it well.

But at this point, it becomes a distraction to learning about the significant other mysteries of Jeffrey Epstein. Now, I just wanted to kind of wrap up on, you mentioned the significant mysteries of Jeffrey Epstein, but there are significant mysteries this week about what happens next with this attempt to revenge. Can John Bolton be prosecuted? I knew that's a question that nobody, neither of you are hiding with the answer to.

But is Trump cognizing of the Pandora's box that he opens up when he orders or at least suggests this revenge? Well, it's very hard to say what Donald Trump is cognizant of. You know, self-awareness certainly is not something that he possesses or even a broader global awareness is probably not something that he possesses. What he focuses on in these situations, John Bolton, anybody else he's filing lawsuits against, is the immediate pain in convenience, public humiliation.

You know, Donald Trump lives day to day. So what happens to this is this, is Donald Trump setting out on a course to put John Bolton in jail? I'm sure he would love to put John Bolton in jail, but that's not really the, that's not how he has, how he is looking at this. As I'm going to make life difficult today for John Bolton.

Michael, we don't need to make quite a clue for you today, but you will be back next week bringing light to the darkness of Trump's head. Michael, thank you for joining us. Thank you, thank you for having me and I will see you soon. It's been a pleasure, thank you.

So we end on a cliffhanger who is next on Trump's revenge rampage, are the Epstein files are taking time bomb or rust a dut. What will be the next distraction? Stay glued to the Daily Beast for minute by minute breaking news. Please subscribe to Daily Beast.com and come back for the next thrilling episode of the Daily Beast podcast by subscribing on YouTube or wherever you get your podcasts.

And of course, Michael Wolfe will be bringing his extraordinary insights to Inside Trump's head next week. Thank you to everyone who got with my accent. If you like this podcast, share it with a friend, share it with an enemy, share with Trump's enemies. And as Joanna always says, be beast.

Finally, thanks to our production team, senior producer, Devin Rogerino, associate producer, and a Vanuysen and our video editor, J.T. M.O.D.D. Want more great listens? Check out our comedy podcast, The Last Left, and our star started the Daily Beast podcast at the Daily Beast.com.

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This episode was published on August 24, 2025.

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Michael Wolff, author of four bestselling books on Donald Trump, joins the Daily Beast’s executive editor, Hugh Doherty, to dissect the former president’s expanding enemies list. From the FBI raid on John Bolton’s home to Trump’s fixation on Black...

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