Monday, December 22, 2025

Are Trump’s Actions Unprecedented? We Asked Historians (Again).

Since the start of his second term, President Trump has cut budgets, made demands on public institutions, and attacked the media and speech in actions regularly called unprecedented.

In April, we asked presidential historians if they could come up with comparable examples in previous administrations — and to tell us when they couldn’t. You can read that earlier article here.

We went back to the historians (and some political scientists) to help us categorize the administration’s actions and pronouncements that have happened since: whether they’re unprecedented, relatively common or somewhere in between.

No clear precedent

President Trump has taken some actions that do not have a comparable historical example, according to historians.

Used the military to attack and kill suspected drug smugglers

TRUMP’S ACTIONS

President Trump has ordered the military to kill people aboard boats he says have been smuggling drugs, claiming the power to redefine drug trafficking as armed conflict.

IN THE PAST

Historians said the closest parallels to Mr. Trump’s strikes in international waters were attacks on pirates — from Thomas Jefferson’s attacks on Barbary corsairs to Barack Obama’s use of military force against Somali pirates in 2009. But President Obama’s efforts were largely rescue missions; Jefferson was also responding to the capture of American ships.

“Since the 1970s, presidents have claimed the right to take military action, including murderous assaults, against nonstate actors who threaten the United States,” said Jeremi Suri, a professor at the University of Texas at Austin. However, he said, “the United States has generally not targeted drug smugglers in this way.”

The U.S. has helped other governments in Central America to apprehend drug traffickers. No presidents have unilaterally killed alleged drug smugglers in international waters.

Manisha Sinha

Professor of American History, University of Connecticut

No clear precedent

Cast doubt on vaccine efficacy and safety

TRUMP’S ACTIONS

With Robert F. Kennedy Jr. as health secretary, the Trump administration has begun to overhaul American vaccine policy. A vaccine skeptic, Mr. Kennedy replaced a vaccine advisory panel with handpicked members. The panel ended a decades-long recommendation to vaccinate babies against hepatitis B at birth. Mr. Kennedy also canceled hundreds of millions of dollars in grants and contracts to develop mRNA vaccines. Mr. Trump hailed Covid vaccines as a miracle during his first term but has since questioned whether they work, and Mr. Kennedy has called them “the deadliest vaccine ever made.”

IN THE PAST

Previous presidents have typically promoted vaccines. The government has changed the vaccine schedule and pulled recommendations for vaccines before, including for a rotavirus gastroenteritis vaccine in the 1990s. And manufacturers have voluntarily withdrawn vaccines from the market. But no presidential administration has made such an effort to dismantle vaccine policy.

Other presidents tried to expand vaccines. This goes all the way back to George Washington during the Revolutionary War, who mandated smallpox inoculations for his army.

Robert Watson

Professor of History, Lynn University

No clear precedent

Asked states to gerrymander to add more seats for his party

TRUMP’S ACTIONS

President Trump and his aides have pushed for lawmakers across the country to redraw maps in favor of Republicans.

IN THE PAST

This has not been done publicly, though an adviser to George W. Bush, Karl Rove, was reported to have lobbied state legislators to redistrict in 2003.

No previous president has done this so overtly, but gerrymandering for political advantage has been a basic tool of political parties since the earliest years of the republic.

Kendrick Clements

Professor, University of South Carolina

No clear precedent

Owned a company that received a major investment from a sovereign state

TRUMP’S ACTIONS

Earlier this year, a state-controlled United Arab Emirates firm used $2 billion of cryptocurrency issued by World Liberty Financial — a start-up owned by the Trump family — to invest in a crypto exchange. That effectively serves as a huge deposit for World Liberty, which can then generate returns in the tens of millions of dollars each year.

IN THE PAST

Historians said there was no comparable example.

Past presidents took pains to put their holdings in a blind trust or to divest entirely from identifiable individual companies.

Andrew Rudalevige

Professor of Government, Bowdoin College

No clear precedent

Tried to remove a member of the Federal Reserve Board

TRUMP’S ACTIONS

President Trump tried to fire a Federal Reserve governor, Lisa Cook, accusing her of mortgage fraud. (The Supreme Court stopped the firing until it could hear arguments in January, and she maintains her innocence.) It’s part of a broader, stated effort to gain more influence over the board.

IN THE PAST

Presidents have fought with the Fed before; under President Harry Truman, the head of the Board of Governors resigned amid a disagreement with the administration. But no president has directly fired a Federal Reserve official.

A clip from a New York Times article in March 1951 about the resignation of the head of the Fed’s Board of Governors. TimesMachine

They have often put pressure on the Fed, but I don’t know of any president who has claimed the power to fire a sitting governor and tried to carry it out.

David Greenberg

Professor of History, Rutgers University

No clear precedent

Ended data collection efforts across government

TRUMP’S ACTIONS

The Trump administration has stopped or plans to stop collecting data on environmental disasters, climate change, food insecurity, emissions from polluters and more.

IN THE PAST

No president has stopped data collection at such a scale.

There have been other presidents who have appointed people as heads of agencies but who opposed the missions of those agencies. But that is a far cry from eliminating the government’s longstanding practices of producing reliable data, on nearly everything of concern to the public and for which the government is responsible.

Michael Gerhardt

Professor of Jurisprudence, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Law School

No clear precedent

Ordered a review of public museums to align with administration views

TRUMP’S ACTIONS

The White House told the Smithsonian Institution — a museum group founded and funded by the federal government — that it would have 120 days to change any content that the administration found problematic in “tone, historical framing and alignment with American ideals.”

IN THE PAST

There’s no comparison for such a broad and public demand on the nation’s museums, historians said.

There have been instances of perceived pressure, or limited influence. A former Smithsonian administrator claimed that the National Museum of Natural History toned down an exhibit on climate change during the George W. Bush administration. And it was reported that the Nixon administration told what is now the National Museum of American History to close an exhibit on voting rights ahead of a ball that was part of Nixon’s second inauguration.

No clear precedent

Cast doubt on official Bureau of Labor Statistics jobs numbers

TRUMP’S ACTIONS

President Trump claimed without evidence that weak job numbers from the Bureau of Labor Statistics were “rigged” and fired the agency’s commissioner.

IN THE PAST

No president has done this publicly and so directly in the years the Bureau of Labor has been collecting and publishing data. (Since the late 1800s.) Ronald Reagan once said a framing of B.L.S. data was misleading, but didn’t question the data itself. Richard Nixon’s administration made some changes to how B.L.S. reported monthly data. But when he threw doubt on the B.L.S., it was in private conversation. (It was eventually revealed that he had blamed Jewish people working at the agency for unfavorable statistics.)

Presidents have always spun bad numbers; few have declared war on arithmetic itself.

Alexis Coe

Presidential historian and senior fellow at New America

No clear precedent

Sought damages from the Justice Department for federal investigations into him

TRUMP’S ACTIONS

President Trump is reported to have demanded that the Justice Department pay him $230 million in compensation for past investigations into his actions.

IN THE PAST

There’s no real comparison, historians say. Andrew Jackson was once fined for suspending habeas corpus; he lobbied Congress for a refund. But that lobbying took place after his presidency, said Matthew Warshauer, professor of history at Central Connecticut State University. (It was successful.)

Has happened, but under different circumstances

In several cases, Mr. Trump’s actions are precedented, but there are details that make them different: scale, context, motivation or results.

The following are events in which our scholars did not always agree on the extent of a precedent.

Sent the National Guard to cities

TRUMP’S ACTIONS

President Trump has expanded the role of the National Guard, deploying its troops to cities as part of a stated federal crackdown on crime. In several cases, governors or local officials have sued to block the deployments.

IN THE PAST

Presidents have deployed the National Guard to cities numerous times, including to protect civil rights advocates marching from Selma to Montgomery in Alabama; to enforce Brown v. Board of Education in Little Rock, Ark.; in response to the 1992 Los Angeles riots; to quell a riot in Detroit in 1943; and to help Hurricane Andrew relief efforts in Florida.

But in most cases, unlike President Trump, presidents deployed the National Guard at the request of, or with the cooperation of, state lawmakers. (That was not the case when presidents used the National Guard to support integration in Arkansas and protect civil rights activists in Alabama.)

A California National Guard unit deployed in Los Angeles during the 1992 riots. Joe Marquette/Associated Press

With the exception of using troops to protect American citizens during the height of civil rights reform, American presidents have typically respected the authority of states and only mobilized troops at the request of state lawmakers.

Nicole L. Anslover

Associate Professor of History, Florida Atlantic University

Has happened, but under different circumstances

Directed the attorney general to investigate or prosecute political rivals

TRUMP’S ACTIONS

President Trump has pushed Attorney General Pam Bondi and his Justice Department to investigate or seek criminal charges against his perceived enemies, including George Soros, the billionaire Democratic donor; the former F.B.I. director James B. Comey; and the New York attorney general Letitia James.

IN THE PAST

Nixon also tried to use the federal government — including the Department of Justice — to go after his “enemies list” through investigations and other legal harassment. One memo from his White House counsel describes “how we can use the available federal machinery to screw our political enemies.”

But “it was on a limited case-by-case basis, and many of his own appointees and federal workers thwarted his illegalities,” said Robert Watson, a professor of history at Lynn University.

A clip from a New York Times article in June 1973 about President Nixon’s list of political enemies. TimesMachine

Nixon tried to act in secrecy and deny his vendettas.

Jeremi Suri

Professor of History and Public Affairs, University of Texas at Austin

Has happened, but under different circumstances

Carried out large-scale immigration raids

TRUMP’S ACTIONS

Federal agents have conducted immigration enforcement raids in several Democrat-led cities, arresting and detaining thousands in Washington, Chicago, Los Angeles and Charlotte, N.C., among others.

IN THE PAST

Eisenhower carried out deportations of illegal immigrants, known at the time as “Operation Wetback.” These targeted Mexican migrants, and they were more focused on agricultural border areas than major cities.

Mexican nationals seized for deportation in Southern California, June 17, 1954. Associated Press, via Alamy

Has happened, but under different circumstances

Arranged for a government stake in a U.S. company

TRUMP’S ACTIONS

The Trump administration allowed Japan’s Nippon Steel to take over U.S. Steel in exchange for a “golden share” giving the White House a permanent say in the company’s business. (The Trump administration has also purchased shares or options in other private companies involved in minerals, nuclear energy and semiconductors.)

IN THE PAST

The U.S. government received shares of auto companies while bailing them out during the Great Recession in 2009, but it sold those within a few years to recoup some of the money it had spent.

The Trump effort has centered on national security concerns. Prior administrations have taken control of the private sector briefly during wartime, but those were not ongoing ownership stakes.

I can’t think of an example when companies were forced to pay premiums of this sort to the U.S. government — even giving federal actors formal long-term decision-making authority for corporate behavior — as a cost of doing business.

Andrew Rudalevige

Professor of Government, Bowdoin College

Has happened, but under different circumstances

Carried out a major demolition and renovation of the White House

TRUMP’S ACTIONS

The Trump administration took down the East Wing of the White House to build a 90,000-square-foot ballroom.

IN THE PAST

The White House went through a demolition and renovation under President Truman, when the building was in danger of physical collapse.

Other presidents have made renovations — including significant expansions — but historians could not name another demolition of a major part of the building.

The gutted interior of the White House during a 1950 renovation under President Harry Truman. The White House, via Associated Press

Has happened, but under different circumstances

Struck a deal with drug companies to sell prescriptions at lower prices and set up an online drugstore with the president’s name

TRUMP’S ACTIONS

President Trump has tried to lower prescription drug prices through two primary channels: He has made deals with numerous major drugmakers (including Pfizer, AstraZeneca and Eli Lilly) to sell drugs to Medicaid at lower prices; and he has committed to starting TrumpRx, a portal through which patients can buy drugs directly from drugmakers.

IN THE PAST

Previous presidents have tried various strategies to make prescription drugs more affordable, including negotiating with industry. (Most recently, the Biden administration brought drugmakers to the negotiating table.)

A marketplace with the president’s name on it is new.

An excerpt from a speech on health care given by President Lyndon Johnson to Congress in 1968. TimesMachine

Earlier efforts to cut drug costs — Bill Clinton’s aborted price-control proposals, George W. Bush’s Medicare Part D expansion, Barack Obama’s negotiation push under the Affordable Care Act — were policy fights, not product launches.

Alexis Coe

Presidential historian and senior fellow at New America

Has happened, but under different circumstances

Pulled back public infrastructure grants in mostly blue states

TRUMP’S ACTIONS

The Trump administration has frozen and terminated grants for infrastructure that were largely set to be in districts that vote Democratic, and the president has bragged about it. “A lot of good can come down from shutdowns,” Mr. Trump said in October. “We can get rid of a lot of things that we didn’t want, and they’d be Democrat things.” (Some Republican districts have also lost projects.)

IN THE PAST

Pulling back funds already allocated is unusual, scholars told The Times. Presidents have often directed government benefits to key constituencies and favored states and districts, but not in such a public and direct manner.

When Nixon’s administration made large cuts to military bases in the early 1970s, states in the Northeast were hit the hardest, leading to speculation that politics played a role.

Presidents have always played politics with public monies, although often as discreetly as possible.

Stephen F. Knott

Emeritus Professor of National Security Affairs, United States Naval War College

Has happened, but under different circumstances

Signed large cuts to health care programs into law

TRUMP’S ACTIONS

The sprawling policy bill pushed by the president and passed by Republicans in July contained more than $1.1 trillion in cuts to health care programs, including roughly $900 billion in cuts to Medicaid — about 11 percent of projected spending on the program over a decade.

IN THE PAST

Under President Reagan, Congress reduced Medicaid and Medicare spending. Medicaid cuts in the early 1980s totaled $1 billion each year, around 5 percent of annual Medicaid spending. The cuts came in the form of smaller payments to states, which then cut services. (People forced off welfare rolls by Reagan’s administration often lost Medicaid benefits, too.) George W. Bush signed into law policy changes that made smaller reductions in Medicaid spending.

The Affordable Care Act, signed by President Obama in 2010, included more than $700 billion in reductions to Medicare, though the bill increased spending on health care overall.

A protest of the Reagan administration’s proposed cuts to Medicare in 1982 in Helena, Mont. George Lane/Associated Press

Since the beginning of federal health care programs in the 1930s, policymakers have been more likely to expand than cut such programs.

Kendrick Clements

Professor, University of South Carolina

Has happened, but under different circumstances

Auctioned face-to-face access

TRUMP’S ACTIONS

Mr. Trump invited people who spent the most on his personal cryptocurrency to a White House gala dinner.

IN THE PAST

Many presidents have rewarded their major donors with special privileges. (Bill Clinton gave some top donors meals, outings and overnight stays; major fund-raisers also stayed overnight in George W. Bush’s White House; and inaugurations have long been a way for donors to get close to the president.) But Mr. Trump, not his campaign, personally benefited from the crypto investments.

The standards of White House conduct related to maintaining proper distance from acts of bribery, perceived or real, have demonstrably deteriorated over the years. In 1958, White House chief of staff Sherman Adams was forced to resign from the Eisenhower administration because he had accepted a vicuña overcoat and a rug from a Boston businessman under investigation by the Federal Trade Commission.

Russell Riley

Professor of Ethics and Institutions, University of Virginia’s Miller Center

Has happened, but under different circumstances

Attacked the media, including suing newspapers

TRUMP’S ACTIONS

President Trump has directed defamation lawsuits against The Wall Street Journal and The Times. He has also sued Paramount (before starting his second term) over a Kamala Harris interview; blocked reporters from parts of the White House where they’ve been allowed for decades; threatened to pull broadcasters’ licences over late-night hosts he dislikes; imposed restrictions on military reporters; and persuaded Congress to cut funding for public media.

IN THE PAST

No other sitting president has specifically filed a defamation lawsuit against a newspaper. (Theodore Roosevelt did sue a small-town newspaper for libel for accusations of drunkenness, but only after leaving office.)

There is, however, a long history of attempts by presidential administrations to pressure the news media over critical coverage. Abraham Lincoln shut down pro-Confederacy newspapers during the Civil War and arrested their editors; in World War I, the government charged some journalists who opposed the war under the Espionage Act; the Nixon administration tried to stop the publication of the Pentagon Papers. Nixon also listed journalists on his “enemies list” and ordered wiretaps of reporters.

On July 1, 1971, The Times resumed publication of its series of articles based on the secret Pentagon papers, after it was given the green light by the U.S. Supreme Court. Jim Wells/Associated Press

White House grumping about critical coverage is an age-old feature of the Washington community. But rarely has this gone beyond a sharp elbow in the press room or maybe a back-channel call to the publisher to yelp.

Russell Riley

Professor of Ethics and Institutions, University of Virginia’s Miller Center

Not uncommon

A few of Mr. Trump’s moves are, if not standard practice, still actions that other U.S. presidents have taken in recent decades.

Put on a military parade

TRUMP’S ACTIONS

In June, President Trump presided over a procession of troops, weaponry and military vehicles in Washington in commemoration of the Army’s 250th birthday and his own 79th.

IN THE PAST

Large-scale military parades aren’t uncommon, though they often happen during or at the close of a war. Among other examples, George H.W. Bush held a large military parade in 1991 after the Persian Gulf War, and John F. Kennedy hosted one during his inaugural in 1961, at the height of the Cold War.

Soldiers of the allied coalition carried their national flags past President George H.W. Bush during the National Victory Parade in Washington in 1991. Ron Edmonds/Associated Press

Not uncommon

Established fast-track visas for wealthy immigrants

TRUMP’S ACTIONS

The president has launched a program that is intended to allow people to buy legal residency in the U.S. with a $1 million “contribution” to the U.S. government.

IN THE PAST

The U.S. has long had a program that allows entrance to wealthy immigrants: the EB-5 program, for people willing to invest $1 million (less in some circumstances) in a business that would hire Americans. President Trump’s program is new in style — it’s called the “gold card” — but not in function.

Bill Clinton created the Immigrant Investor Pilot Program, with Obama extending the idea to the Regional Center Pilot Program. It’s actually not a new thing what President Trump is doing.

Thomas Balcerski

Presidential Historian, Eastern Connecticut State University

Not uncommon

Helped broker an agreement for a cease-fire in Gaza, and an exchange of hostages and prisoners

TRUMP’S ACTIONS

The administration’s deal between Hamas and Israel in October — which Jared Kushner, Mr. Trump’s son-in-law, helped broker — resulted in a cease-fire and the release of the remaining Israeli hostages and hundreds of Palestinian prisoners.

IN THE PAST

It’s common for American presidents to step in and help negotiate deals between Israel and Arab nations; President Biden negotiated a cease-fire and prisoner exchange, though the deal fell apart.

President Trump should be applauded for his effort in the Mideast. This is his greatest foreign policy achievement so far.

Wilbur C. Rich

Emeritus Professor of Political Science, Wellesley College

President Bill Clinton with Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin of Israel and Yasser Arafat of the Palestine Liberation Organization at the signing ceremony for the 1993 Oslo Accords. Paul Hosefros/The New York Times

Not uncommon

Pulled back United Nations funding

TRUMP’S ACTIONS

President Trump has withdrawn or frozen U.S. funding for several agencies within the U.N., including the World Health Organization and the Human Rights Council.

IN THE PAST

The Reagan administration, claiming mismanagement at the U.N., withheld funds in the 1980s. George W. Bush withheld money from the U.N.’s Population Fund over concerns about abortion and other family planning issues.

A clip from a New York Times article in July 2002. TimesMachine

The anti-U.N. rhetoric has been part of the Republican political discourse for some time.

Manisha Sinha

Professor of American History, University of Connecticut

Not uncommon

Attacked Iran’s nuclear facilities

TRUMP’S ACTIONS

President Trump ordered an attack on three key nuclear sites in Iran in June, without seeking congressional authorization.

IN THE PAST

Though Mr. Trump was the first to bomb Iranian nuclear sites, previous administrations have engaged in sabotage of Iranian nuclear systems — including the George W. Bush and Obama administrations’ development and use of the computer worm Stuxnet. (That was a destructive program that targeted centrifuges and delayed Tehran’s ability to make nuclear weapons.)

More broadly, presidents have long taken military actions without congressional sign-off.

About the data

For this project, we reached out to dozens of historians and political scientists, including some participants of C-SPAN’s Presidential Historians Survey. We asked them to provide us with relevant precedent to specific Trump actions, if there were any, and to describe how those precedents were and were not similar to what Mr. Trump has done.

We received responses from 36 experts. In addition to those we quoted, we used notes and research from: Andrew Bacevich, Paul Brandus, Vernon Burton, Jeffrey Engel, Michael A. Genovese, Harold Holzer, Chandler James, Scott Kaufman, Thomas J. Knock, Douglas L. Kriner, Allan Lichtman, Bruce Miroff, Barbara Perry, Gary Richardson, Robert Schmuhl, Craig Shirley, Brooks Simpson, Robert Strong, Tevi Troy, Mark K. Updegrove, Ted Widmer, B. Dan Wood and David B. Woolner.

We categorized actions based on the overall responses, along with additional reporting and research.

Justin Vaughn and Brandon Rottinghaus of the Presidential Greatness Project assisted in establishing a list of historians and constructing the initial survey.

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