Whoever smelt it …

Presented by GE Vernova: The power players, policy developments and whispers percolating inside Donald Trump's unprecedented return to power.
Jan 24, 2025 View in browser
 
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By Irie Sentner, Sophia Cai and Ben Johansen

Presented by GE Vernova

Welcome to POLITICO’s West Wing Playbook, your guide to the power dynamics, personnel decisions and policy deliberations of Donald Trump’s White House.

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Move over, GAVIN NEWSOM. President DONALD TRUMP has another California nemesis — and it’s a three-inch-long endangered fish.

The president, who is en route to Los Angeles Friday afternoon to survey the city’s wildfire damage as part of the first domestic trip of his second term, has consistently blamed the fires’ sweeping devastation on the blue state’s Democratic governor and progressive policies.

But he’s also trained his ire on the delta smelt — a silver, minnow-like fish he says is impeding state officials from releasing water from the north to extinguish the flames in the south.

“They have all this water, and it’s really good water, up high … and they’re restricting it,” Trump told reporters Tuesday. California’s pipes, the president said, “are bone dry” — and it’s all “to protect the delta smelt, it’s a fish doing poorly anyway. How are you protecting the delta smelt by not giving it water? It’s a fish. It needs water. Nobody can answer that question.”

Setting aside Trump’s scientifically-challenged analysis for a moment, it’s not the first time the president has gone after the fish. Earlier this month, Trump slammed Newsom on Truth Social for refusing “to sign the water restoration declaration put before him” in order to “protect an essentially worthless fish called a smelt, by giving it less water (it didn’t work!).”

In fact, the president’s vendetta against the smelt goes back nearly a decade, our JENNIFER YACHNIN reported in September. Trump started slamming the “three-inch fish” as early as May 2016 in a speech to farmers in central California during the 2016 primary.

The beef can be traced back to former Rep. DEVIN NUNES (R-Calif.), who has railed against the “stupid little fish” for even longer — since at least 2014. Trump and Nunes spoke about the smelt “right at the beginning, before I got elected,” the president revealed during his first term. Since then, Trump has attacked the smelt in public remarks and interviews at least a dozen times, returning to the talking point during all three of his presidential campaigns.

As part of his flurry of executive actions on Monday, Trump issued a memorandum directing the Commerce and Interior secretaries to route more water from the north to the south of the state. That memo, titled “Putting People over Fish: Stopping Radical Environmentalism to Provide Water to Southern California,” explicitly blamed the smelt and other fish species for a successful federal lawsuit Newsom brought against the Trump administration in his first term to limit the flow of water from California’s northern Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta to the state’s Central Valley.

The smelt — which is nearly extinct and endemic to the Delta — can’t hit back. But Newsom’s press office did, writing Tuesday on X: “The only thing fishy are Trump’s facts.”

“Management of the state water project has nothing to do with the supply of water for fighting fires in Southern California,” Newsom spokesperson BOB SALLADAY said in a statement to West Wing Playbook. “In fact, all of the reservoirs in Southern California were full at the time of the fire.”

Trump’s core issue with the smelt — at least as it relates to the fires — appears to be a misunderstanding of what went wrong in Los Angeles when the hydrants went dry.

“They didn't let the water flow, and they still haven't for whatever reason,” the president told reporters earlier today before departing the White House. That reason, Trump has said again and again, has to do with protecting the smelt.

But “Southern California has water. There’s no water supply problem down there at all” when it comes to fighting the fires, said LETITIA GRENIER, director of the Water Policy Center at the independent Public Policy Institute of California. The real issue, Grenier explained, was that the water lines lost pressure — “an infrastructure limitation,” not a supply problem.

The state does have rules in place to leave enough water in rivers to maintain the dwindling populations of smelt and other threatened species, Grenier said, and those regulations do affect how much water can flow to the thirsty, drought-stricken population centers of Los Angeles and San Diego.

But, Grenier emphasized, “The fish doesn't have anything to do with limiting water for the Southern California fires.”

A White House spokesperson did not respond to a request for comment.

Later today, Trump is set to tour the Pacific Palisades and receive an emergency briefing, where he’ll be joined by the Democratic Los Angeles Mayor KAREN BASS and a bipartisan group of House members from California, per our MEGAN MESSERLY. Newsom, who invited Trump to California earlier this month, isn’t on that list — though he got last-minute outreach from the White House and, in coordination with Trump’s team, will appear on the airport tarmac for a greeting (and possible pull-side) with Trump, our CHRISTOPHER CADELAGO reports.

The smelt wasn’t on Trump’s invite list either. But Grenier thinks the fish is getting too much attention, anyway.

“I don't know why there’s a focus on the delta smelts in particular,” she said, noting that some other endangered species, like Chinook salmon and steelhead trout, also factor into the regulations. “Maybe because they're not as charismatic.”

A Delta smelt is shown.

A Delta smelt is shown at the University of California, Davis, Fish Conservation and Culture Lab in Byron, California. | Rich Pedroncelli/AP

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POTUS PUZZLER

What gift did MARTIN VAN BUREN receive from the Sultan of Oman?

(Answer at bottom.)

The Oval

AND, WE’RE BACK: As mentioned above, Trump on Friday departed for Los Angeles to survey the wildfires that tore through the state, Messerly reports. His feud with Newsom, is set against a congressional battle over tying federal disaster aid to the state — which Trump said Friday he will condition unless California changes its voting laws to require identification. He also said he “wants to see the water be released and come down into Los Angeles and throughout the state … After that, I will be the greatest president that California has ever seen.”

Trump also traveled to North Carolina to survey the damage done by Hurricane Helene last year. During the visit, he announced that he will sign an executive order “to begin the process of fundamentally reforming and overhauling FEMA, or maybe getting rid of FEMA.” Trump accused the Biden administration of not doing enough to get aid where it’s needed, vowing to speed recovery efforts, our ELI STOKOLS reports.

“It doesn’t matter at this point. [Former President Joe] Biden did a bad job,” Trump said during a roundtable with local officials in Fletcher, where he said some residents still don’t have drinking water and didn’t get sufficient financial compensation following the storm. “This is totally unacceptable, and I’ll be taking strong action.”

In December, Congress approved an additional $29 billion for FEMA to cover ongoing recovery efforts. When pressed on how much additional disaster relief aid he would approve for North Carolina, the president didn’t specify, stating only he planned to do “a lot.”

OH, CANADAAAAA: During his press conference in North Carolina, Trump re-upped his pitch to our northern neighbors. “I would love to see Canada become the 51st state. The Canadian citizens, if that happened, would get a very big tax cut. Tremendous tax cut,” Trump said. “You wouldn’t have to worry about military. You’d have better health coverage. You’d have much better health coverage. I think the people of Canada would like it.”

For what it’s worth, Canada has a universal healthcare system in which any citizen can receive public health insurance.

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Powering America's Future Today. As the leading American energy manufacturer, we've never stopped building the technologies that drive today's economy and define the future of energy. We know an abundant, independent, and secure energy system starts here at home. It's why we're investing millions in American manufacturing and creating thousands of new jobs. Learn more.

 
THE BUREAUCRATS

YOU’RE ON YOUR OWN, PAL: Trump on Thursday night terminated the security detail for Dr. ANTHONY FAUCI, which was paid for by the National Institutes of Health — on the same week he pulled security for former CIA Director JOHN BRENNAN and former national security adviser JOHN BOLTON. While in North Carolina, he was asked whether he would feel responsible if something were to happen to Fauci or Bolton.

“No, no. They all made a lot of money. They can hire their own security team,” Trump said.

IT BE YOUR OWN PEOPLE: Top advisers to ROBERT F. KENNEDY JR. are battling over how aggressively to target vaccines during his first days as the Health and Human Services secretary, amid fears of a political backlash that could quickly derail his agenda and relationship with Trump, our ADAM CANCRYN reports. That internal debate has pitted some of Kennedy’s closest and most strident anti-vaccine allies against other Trump officials, slowing efforts to finalize his policy plans.

“The people he really trusts are people that obviously are trying to execute a plan to totally take away vaccines,” said one person with knowledge of the discussions. “The risk of overreach, I don’t think, is zero.”

FIRST IN WEST WING PLAYBOOK: SAURABH SHARMA is now a special assistant to the president in the Presidential Personnel Office, two people familiar with the matter told our DANIEL LIPPMAN. He most recently was president of American Moment, a conservative personnel development organization.

MORE PERSONNEL MOVES: RICKY GILL is now senior director for South and Central Asian affairs at the National Security Council and a special assistant to the president. Gill most recently headed up Gill Capital Group and was a policy adviser to TC Energy. He worked for the NSC on Russian and European energy security and at the State Department during the first Trump administration.

— VICTORIA LaCIVITA is joining the White House as communications director for the Office of Science and Technology Policy. LaCivita headed up Trump’s communications team in Michigan during the campaign, and is the daughter of Trump’s campaign manager, CHRIS LaCIVITA.

SPOTTED: FBI director-nominee KASH PATEL having dinner at Butterworth’s on Thursday night with his long-time girlfriend, according to a West Wing Playbook tipster.

ADD TO YOUR WEEKEND TO DO LIST: In a much anticipated debut, BAO LI and QING BAO, the giant pandas who landed in Washington in October, made their first public appearance on Friday, as visitors flocked to the National Zoo in Northwest D.C. to meet the local celebrities.

Giant panda Qing Bao eats bamboo during the public debut at the Smithsonian's National Zoo on January 24, 2025.

Giant panda Qing Bao eats bamboo during the public debut at the Smithsonian's National Zoo on January 24, 2025. | AFP via Getty Images/Andrew Caballero-Reynolds

 

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Agenda Setting

PROMISES NOT KEPT: In October, Vice President JD VANCE made a pledge that he and Trump would, if elected, stop the creation of an abomination in Cincinnati. A week into their presidency, there’s been no action, Cincinnati Enquirer’s HAADIZA OGWUDE reports. Graeter’s Ice Cream and Skyline Chili are releasing a new Skyline Spice Ice Cream flavor Monday, the two chains said Friday. The flavor blends Graeter's handcrafted ice cream with oyster crackers and Skyline's signature chili spice, "offering the best of both worlds from these two beloved Cincinnati eateries," according to a press release.

In a post on X in October, Vance said: “President Trump and I will stop this.”

Where’s the initiative, JD?

What We're Reading

The 199 Most Elon Musk Things Elon Musk Has Ever Said (POLITICO’s Michael Kruse)

Trump’s budget pick, Ross Vought, is starting to upend Washington (WaPo’s Tony Romm and Jeff Stein)

Chip Roy and Donald Trump Are on a Collision Course (POLITICO’s Rachael Bade)

A message from GE Vernova:

Powering America's Future Today. As the leading American energy manufacturer, we've never stopped building the technologies that drive today's economy and define the future of energy. We know an abundant, independent, and secure energy system starts here at home. It's why we're investing millions in American manufacturing and creating thousands of new jobs. Learn more.

 
POTUS PUZZLER ANSWER

Early on in Van Buren’s presidency, KABUL AL SAID, the Sultan of Oman, gifted the 8th president a pair of tiger cubs — which Van Buren immediately brought into the White House. But Congress intervened, ruling that he had violated the Emoluments Clause of the Constitution, which prevented the president from receiving foreign gifts.

The cubs were then given to the National Zoo.

A CALL OUT! Do you think you have a harder trivia question? Send us your best one about the presidents, with a citation or sourcing, and we may feature it!

Edited by Jennifer Haberkorn and Noah Bierman

 

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