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Executive Summary
President Donald Trump fielded wide-ranging questions from reporters aboard Air Force One on November 14, 2025, addressing everything from newly surfaced Jeffrey Epstein emails to plans for targeted tariff rollbacks on coffee and produce, a threatened multi-billion dollar lawsuit against the BBC over allegedly edited interview footage, and his administration’s proposed replacement for Obamacare that would give subsidy money directly to consumers rather than insurance companies. Trump announced plans to distribute $2,000 dividend payments to middle and lower-income Americans from tariff revenue sometime in 2026, claimed to have stopped a war between Cambodia and Thailand through tariff threats, revealed the U.S. will conduct nuclear weapons testing “pretty soon,” criticized Republican Congresswoman Marjorie Taylor Greene for questioning his overseas travel, and indicated he’s considering a major F-35 fighter jet sale to Saudi Arabia while working to bring the kingdom into the Abraham Accords.
Participants
Donald J. Trump – President of the United States
Multiple White House Press Corps Reporters (reporters not individually identified by name in transcript)
Detailed Topic-by-Topic Analysis
Jeffrey Epstein Emails and Allegations
The press conference opened with a reporter asking about recently surfaced Jeffrey Epstein emails in which Epstein allegedly referenced Trump “knowing about the girls.” Trump immediately denied any knowledge and redirected attention to others with Epstein connections.
“I know nothing about that,” Trump said. “They would’ve announced that a long time ago. It’s really what did he mean when he spent all the time with Bill Clinton, with the president of Harvard, who, you know who that is. Summers, uh, Larry Summers, whatever his name is. And all of the other people that he spent time with.”
Trump characterized his relationship with Epstein as adversarial: “Jeffrey Epstein and I had a very bad relationship for many years. Uh, but he also saw strength because I was president. So he dictated a couple of memos to himself. Give me a break.”
The President suggested focusing investigations on what he called Epstein’s actual associates: “You’re gonna find out what did he know with respect to Bill Clinton, with respect to the head of Harvard, with respect to all of those people that he knew, including JP Morgan Chase.”
Later in the gaggle, when asked about releasing Epstein files that Congress may vote on, Trump dismissed the matter as political theater: “This is a Democrat hoax, this is a hoax put out by the Democrat, and a couple of few Republicans have gone along with it because they’re weak and ineffective. But this is a Democrat hoax to get away from the fact that they just lost the shutdown and they’ve lost the elections.”
Trump named Reid Hoffman as someone who “spent a lot of time with the island,” claiming “I was never on his island.” He also stated that Bill Clinton “went there supposedly 28 times.”
When asked about a potential pardon for Ghislaine Maxwell, Epstein’s former associate currently serving a prison sentence, Trump said: “I haven’t even thought about it. I mean, I haven’t thought about it for months. Maybe I haven’t thought about it at all. You’re just asking me a question. And I don’t talk about that. I don’t rule it in or out.”
Venezuela Policy
When asked about his administration’s approach to Venezuela, Trump indicated decisions remain pending but suggested progress on drug interdiction.
“I haven’t made up my mind yet. I mean, I can’t tell you what it would be,” Trump said when asked about potential action. He noted: “We’ve made a lot of progress with Venezuela in terms of stopping drugs from pouring in. But we have a Mexico problem. We have a Colombia problem, meaning Colombia, the country.”
Trump claimed success on drug enforcement overall: “We’re doing very well. Drugs coming into our country are greatly slowed as you can imagine.”
When a reporter asked what he would say to supporters potentially concerned about “another foreign campaign,” Trump deflected without providing specifics on potential military or other interventions.
Tariff Rollbacks on Food Items
One of the major policy announcements came regarding selective tariff reductions on food products to lower consumer prices. This represents a shift from Trump’s typically protectionist trade stance, justified by the argument that these products don’t compete with American agriculture.
“I just wanna bring down some of the foods,” Trump explained. “Look for the most part, the foods, when we cut back a little bit on those tariffs, uh, we’ll get the price down, but they’re not competitive in this country, like tomatoes and bananas and things. We don’t make them in this country. So there’s no protection of our industries or our food products.”
Trump specifically mentioned coffee as an example: “We just had a little bit of a rollback on some foods, like coffee as an example, where the prices of coffee are a little bit high now. They’ll be on the low side in a very short period of time.”
When asked if more rollbacks might be coming, Trump suggested this would be a limited adjustment: “I don’t think it’ll be necessary. We just had a little bit of a rollback on some foods.”
The President positioned these reductions within his broader narrative about inflation inherited from the previous administration: “The problem is we inherited the country when we took over January 20th, where the prices were through the roof. So they were up 30, 40, 50%. If we got ’em down 30%, that means they’re still higher than where they were.”
BBC Lawsuit Over Edited Interview
Trump announced plans to sue the BBC for between one and five billion dollars over what he characterized as deliberately altered interview footage, praising the UK’s Telegraph newspaper for exposing the alleged manipulation.
When a Telegraph reporter mentioned the paper’s role in the story, Trump effusively praised their work: “What a job you did. What a job you did. Are you proud of yourselves?” He continued: “Honestly, congratulations. You did a great service to a lot of countries, a lot of great human beings, if you wanna know the truth, that exposing what fake news is all about. What BBC did, nobody would even think a thing like that was done. They actually changed the words coming out of my mouth.”
Trump indicated the lawsuit would proceed despite the BBC’s apology: “We’ll sue them for anywhere between a billion and $5 billion probably sometime next week.” When asked if the BBC’s apology and retraction without compensation was sufficient, he was unequivocal: “Well, I think I have to do it. I mean, it’s, they’ve even admitted that they cheated.”
He compared the BBC’s actions unfavorably even to CBS’s editing of a Kamala Harris interview: “That’s worse than what CBS did with Kamala. They changed your answer, but at least they didn’t show it you know, coming out of her mouth.”
Trump suggested he would raise the issue with British Prime Minister Keir Starmer: “I have not, but I’ll call him. I’m gonna call him over the weekend. He actually put a call in to me.” He claimed the UK government is “very, very embarrassed by BBC, what they meant.”
When a British reporter asked about the BBC’s license fee system requiring UK viewers to pay over $200 annually, Trump responded: “The people of the UK are very angry about what happened as you can imagine, because it shows the BBC is fake news, which you and I knew that for a long time, but we didn’t know it was this fake.”
Tariffs, Inflation, and Economic Policy
Throughout the gaggle, Trump repeatedly defended his tariff policy as both economically beneficial and geopolitically essential, while claiming they don’t significantly increase consumer prices.
When challenged on the seeming contradiction between claiming tariffs don’t raise prices while simultaneously rolling some back, Trump argued: “I say they may in some cases, but to a large extent, they’ve been warned by the country as an example. We have virtually no inflation and yet, we’ve taken in hundreds of millions of dollars. So we’ve taken in hundreds of billions of dollars.”
Trump emphasized tariffs’ role in preventing conflicts: “We’ve used tariffs to stop wars. You look at India and Pakistan. Look at so many wars I stopped just by saying, ‘I’m gonna oppose tariffs on your country if you’re gonna have a war.’”
He claimed tariffs are largely absorbed by foreign entities rather than American consumers: “Oftentimes, and to a large extent, the countries themselves pick up the damp, the, the companies, the damp.” He added: “I think very little” is paid by Americans, emphasizing “when you add the trillions of dollars that the coun- — our country is making.”
Trump positioned tariffs as crucial leverage: “When you add all of the benefits, the single greatest thing we have right now is the use of tariffs, and I used them properly. Uh, for years they’ve been used against us.”
$2,000 Dividend Payments
Trump announced plans to distribute $2,000 payments to middle and lower-income Americans from tariff revenue, framing it as a “dividend” from successful trade policy.
“I’ll be giving back $2,000 or so to middle-income people, low-income people, everybody but the rich, we’ll be giving $2,000 back,” Trump stated.
When asked if these would arrive before Christmas, he clarified the timeline: “No, no, not for this year. It’ll be next year sometime.” Pressed for specifics, he said: “Sometime during the year next — It’s a lot of money, but we’ve taken in a lot of money from tariffs.”
Trump distinguished these payments from what he characterized as the Biden administration’s spending: “This is money earned as opposed to money that was made up. You know, that money was made up. Biden gave, like, the Inflation Reduction Act, which did not reduce inflation, and it wasn’t meant to. And they admitted it was a phony name.”
For context, the Inflation Reduction Act was a major Biden administration legislative achievement focused on climate change, healthcare costs, and tax reform. Republicans have criticized it as misnamed since its primary provisions dealt with climate investments rather than direct inflation reduction.
Trump emphasized the payments would be funded by actual revenue: “When I pay people $2,000 each for, uh, low and moderate income and middle income people, everybody but the rich will get this. That, that’s not made up. That’s real money that comes from other countries.”
He also indicated debt reduction remains a priority: “We’re gonna be doing a dividend, which people will enjoy and spend and do what they want, but we’re also going to be reducing debt very substan–” noting the current $37 trillion national debt.
Cambodia-Thailand War Prevention
Trump claimed to have prevented a war between Cambodia and Thailand on the day of the press gaggle, using tariff threats as diplomatic leverage.
“Just today, I stopped a war. I won’t go into which one, but you’ll be able to figure it out,” Trump teased. When a reporter immediately guessed “Cambodia and Thailand,” Trump responded: “But I s- — that was quick. Very smart. Good, thank you.”
He emphasized the broader principle: “Just today, I stopped a war by the use of tariffs. Oftentimes, I’m able to do that. And if you think of the cost of war, just forget about death, which is number one, but the death within those countries, but that all comes to [Inaudible], in one form or another, it all comes right back to us.”
Trump described his diplomatic intervention: “I spoke to the prime ministers of both countries, and they’re doing great. I think they’re gonna be fine.”
When pressed on whether the Supreme Court might rule against his use of tariffs (apparently referencing potential legal challenges to executive tariff authority), Trump suggested alternatives would be necessary but emphasized the stakes: “Well, then I, uh, I’ll have to do something else. We’ll have to figure something else. That would be a very sad day for our country.”
For readers unfamiliar with recent Southeast Asian tensions, Cambodia and Thailand have had periodic border disputes over temple complexes and territorial boundaries, though the specifics of the conflict Trump referenced were not detailed in this exchange.
China Trade Deal and Soybean Purchases
Trump provided updates on the administration’s trade agreement with China, particularly regarding agricultural purchases that are politically important to his farm-state base.
When asked if China had actually locked in any soybean purchases since the deal, Trump confirmed: “They’re in the process of doing it. We spoke to ’em today. They’re in the process of doing not only a little bit, but they’ll be doing a lot of soybean purchase.”
He indicated purchases would begin soon: “It started, uh, before that, I think before,” referring to spring planting season. “They’ll be buying a lot of soybeans. But really, Jennifer, a lot of everything else.”
Regarding who negotiated the arrangement, Trump said only: “Top of the line, top of the –” without providing specific names.
Trump also referenced China’s earlier threats regarding rare earth minerals (essential for electronics manufacturing) and how tariffs resolved the standoff: “When China was threatening to us in terms of rare earths, I was able to solve it just by putting tariffs on China, and we made a deal a week later.”
Healthcare Subsidies and Obamacare Replacement
Trump outlined a major proposed shift in healthcare policy, suggesting the administration will redirect Obamacare subsidies away from insurance companies and give money directly to consumers.
“Healthcare subsidies is a good question. So Obamacare, which is the Unaffordable Care Act, it’s, it is totally unaffordable,” Trump began, using his preferred characterization of the Affordable Care Act (commonly known as Obamacare, the signature healthcare legislation of the Obama administration that expanded insurance coverage through subsidies, Medicaid expansion, and insurance marketplace exchanges).
Trump highlighted insurance company profits: “You see the kind of money the insurance companies are making, hundreds of billions of dollars. Their stock is up over a 1,000% over a period — a relatively short period of time.”
He then described the alternative approach: “What we’re going to be doing, what I’m going to be recommending, not this. Obamacare is a disaster, far too expensive and lousy health care. We’re gonna give the money to the people to buy their own healthcare. And the kind of money that we give to the insurance companies is more than going to take care of it.”
Trump emphasized individual choice: “People are gonna be able to buy their own health insurance, and it’s gonna be great healthcare, and they’re gonna get paid by the government. The government will be do — it’ll be one of the greatest deals this country’s ever made. So we’re — Instead of giving it to insurance companies, big, fat, bloated insurance companies, we’re giving the money directly to the people to buy their own healthcare.”
When asked if Americans would still purchase from insurance companies, Trump acknowledged multiple options: “Uh, some may. I mean, they’ll be negotiating prices, truly free enterprise. They’ll be a — You know, you can do it through an insurance company. You can also buy it direct. You know, they have savings accounts. They have a lot of different ways of buying healthcare.”
This represents a fundamental restructuring of how healthcare subsidies would work, shifting from the current system where subsidies reduce premiums on marketplace plans to a voucher-style system where individuals receive funds to purchase coverage on their own. The feasibility and details of such a transition were not elaborated upon.
Investigation of Democratic Donor
Trump confirmed that Jay Clayton, the nominee for U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of New York, would investigate an unnamed major Democratic donor, while insisting he didn’t order the investigation.
“I heard they are appointing the U.S. attorney, and I hear a really good one to look into. I hear Southern District is gonna be looking at Jay Clayton, that, uh, he’s a great man, a great attorney, and he’s a highly respected — One of the most respected people in the country in terms of law and law enforcement,” Trump said.
He detailed Clayton’s credentials: “As you know, he headed up the SEC, he was the head of Sullivan and Cromwell for years. He’s one of the most respected people in the country. He’s, uh, been confirmed for the Southern District. And I heard Jay is gonna be looking into it.”
For context, Jay Clayton served as Chairman of the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) during Trump’s first term and was previously a senior partner at the prominent law firm Sullivan & Cromwell. The Southern District of New York is one of the most prestigious and powerful U.S. Attorney offices in the country, handling many high-profile white-collar crime and corruption cases.
When asked directly if a president should be able to order investigations, Trump walked a careful line: “I am the chief law enforcement officer of the country. Uh, not that I want to use that, but I am considered the chief law enforcement agent in the country. And I’m a, I’m allowed to do it. I don’t wanna do it. I’m not doing it. I had nothing to do with that choice. As an example that came from Pam Bondi, from the DOJ.”
Pam Bondi, Trump’s Attorney General, is a former Florida Attorney General who served as one of Trump’s defense lawyers during his first impeachment trial. Trump’s statement attempts to maintain independence between the White House and DOJ investigations while simultaneously defending presidential authority over law enforcement.
Georgia RICO Case
When asked about the Georgia RICO case (referring to the election interference prosecution brought by Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis related to efforts to overturn Georgia’s 2020 election results), Trump expressed surprise the case was continuing.
“I can’t imagine. And I thought that case was over. I was told that case was totally over,” Trump said.
The case gained national attention when it was revealed that Willis had a romantic relationship with the special prosecutor she hired for the case, leading to ethics questions and legal challenges. Trump’s comment suggests he believed these controversies had ended the prosecution.
Recent Asia Trip
Trump defended his recent multi-nation Asia trip against criticism that he was spending too much time on foreign travel instead of domestic political messaging.
“I just got back from a big trip, a very successful trip,” Trump said, detailing the itinerary: “We stopped at Malaysia, Japan, South Korea, it was a phenomenal trip. We had a great meeting with President Xi, who’s, you know, a great leader, great country actually, whether you like it or not.”
He emphasized the economic benefits: “China’s, uh, great country, amazing, amazing place, and Japan, amazing place. We stopped at, uh, tremendous countries with tremendous leaders, and we did really well, we brought back trillions of dollars in trade and other things.”
Trump used the trip to criticize those questioning his travel: “We made a deal with China, we’ve taken billions and billions of dollars. We made a deal with Japan, we’ve taken billions of dollars. We made a deal with South Korea, we’re taking in billions and billions of dollars. If I would stay home, none of that would be happening.”
He noted the limited nature of his travel schedule: “And by the way, I stay home 95, 98% of the time. The last thing I wanna do is travel 22 hours in an airplane, as nice as this plane is.”
Criticism of Marjorie Taylor Greene
In one of the most notable exchanges, Trump sharply criticized Republican Congresswoman Marjorie Taylor Greene of Georgia, who had apparently questioned his overseas travel and other policy positions.
“Marjorie Taylor Greene is not any way, I mean, she has a very different thinking than I have. Uh, something happened to her over the last period of a month or two where she changed I think politically. I, I think that her constituents aren’t gonna be happy,” Trump said.
He suggested political consequences: “Already I have people calling me, they want to challenge her to race in her district in Georgia, and you know, that’s too bad. She’s lost a, a wonderful Conservative reputation.”
Trump defended the necessity of foreign engagement: “When she says, ‘Don’t go overseas.’ If I didn’t go overseas, we might be in a war right now with China.”
He used the rare earth minerals issue as an example: “So let’s say I don’t meet with China. You know what’s happening right now to Georgia, to every other state? They’re not working because your magnets and your rare earths would’ve kicked in and there wouldn’t be a factory in the world that was working.”
Trump continued: “If I didn’t have a relationship overseas with China, with Japan, with South Korea, with all of them, Malaysia went to Malaysia, but visited many more countries than that, if we didn’t do that, if we just stayed right here, you would right now have no factory anywhere in the world that would be working because of rare earth with China.”
When asked if he’d be open to endorsing a primary challenger to Greene, Trump left the door open: “Well, it depends on who runs against her. I mean, I’m no longer much of a fan ’cause I disagree with her policy.”
He reiterated his defense of the Asia trip’s strategic importance: “When she said that, you know, going uh, to foreign countries, bringing back trillions of dollars is not important. Do you think I wanna go and be on an airplane for 20 hours? Some of you were with me, 22 hours to be exact travel and then get off and make a speech and get people to invest hundreds of billions of dollars in our country.”
For context, Marjorie Taylor Greene has been one of Trump’s most vocal supporters in Congress, making this public break particularly significant. She represents Georgia’s 14th congressional district and has been a controversial figure known for embracing conspiracy theories and taking hard-right positions on various issues.
Nuclear Testing Plans
Trump confirmed the United States will resume nuclear weapons testing, something the U.S. hasn’t done since 1992 when it began observing a voluntary moratorium.
“We’re gonna to nuclear test make clear tests because other people test. We have other countries that test. We have more nuclear weapons than any other country. I’m the one that renovated them and built some, and I hated to do it, but I had no choice because they have it,” Trump explained.
He outlined the current nuclear hierarchy: “We have more, Russia second, then China is a distant third, but within four or five years, they’re gonna be up with us.”
Trump expressed interest in arms reduction: “What I would like to do is I would like to go denuclearizattion. In other words, where we have a meeting primarily of the top three to cut back on nuclear weapons. That would be a great thing.”
When asked about timing for a test, Trump said: “Pretty soon. Let’s say pretty soon.”
He later confirmed: “We will do nuclear testing like other countries do. We have more nuclear weapons than any other country, and we have to test.”
When pressed specifically on whether this meant detonating a warhead, Trump declined to elaborate: “I don’t wanna tell you about that. But we will do nuclear testing like other countries do.”
He reiterated China’s growing arsenal: “We’re number one. Russia’s number two. China’s number three. They’re catching up. They’re quite a bit distant from us right now, but they, they’ll catch us in four, five.”
For context, the Comprehensive Nuclear-Test-Ban Treaty (CTBT) bans all nuclear explosions for both civilian and military purposes. While the U.S. signed it in 1996, the Senate never ratified it. However, the U.S. has observed a testing moratorium since 1992. Resuming nuclear testing would be highly controversial internationally and could trigger a new arms race.
MRI and Physical Examination
Trump confirmed he recently underwent an MRI as part of a routine physical examination, emphasizing the positive results.
“Because it’s part of my physical. Getting an MRI is very standard. Well, you think I shouldn’t have it? Other people got it,” Trump said when asked why he needed the scan.
He described the results enthusiastically: “I had an MRI. The doctor said it was the best result he has ever seen as a doctor. That’s it. But I had an MRI as part of my standard yearly or every w- — I think they do it every two years, but I have the physical every year. And the result was outstanding.”
When asked what specific body part was examined, Trump said: “Uh, I have no idea what they analyzed, but whatever they analyzed, they analyzed it well. And they said that I had as good a result as they’ve ever seen.”
Trump also mentioned taking a cognitive test: “The other thing I took is I took as you know, a, uh, advanced, very advanced test on mental acuity. Because I think a president should have to do that. And as you probably heard, I aced it. I got a perfect score. I got the highest one, I got a perfect score.”
He used this to draw a contrast with his predecessor: “And the only reason I tell you that is it’s one subject, unlike Biden and others, that you can take off your plan.”
Filibuster and Midterm Elections
Trump called for Senate Republicans to eliminate the filibuster, the procedural rule requiring 60 votes to advance most legislation in the 100-member Senate.
“I think we should terminate the filibuster. Republicans should terminate the filibuster. The Democrats would do it immediately. If they ever got power. And without Manchin and Sinema, they would’ve done it,” Trump stated.
For context, the filibuster is a Senate rule allowing unlimited debate unless 60 senators vote to end discussion (a process called “cloture”). It effectively means most legislation needs 60 votes to pass rather than a simple majority. Eliminating it would allow the majority party to pass legislation with just 51 votes. Democrats Joe Manchin (West Virginia) and Kyrsten Sinema (Arizona) blocked their party’s efforts to eliminate the filibuster when Democrats controlled the Senate during Biden’s presidency. Both have since left the Democratic Party.
When asked about campaigning for Republicans in upcoming elections, Trump confirmed: “Oh yeah, I’ll be helping people. Yeah. I’ll be on the road helping people. The midterms are very important.”
California Election Lawsuit
Trump announced the Department of Justice would sue California over what he characterized as fraudulent election practices that cost Republicans seats.
“I heard that a big lawsuit will be taking place is, but will be taking place concerning the California hoax. Where they’re trying to get five more seats,” Trump said, referring to apparent Democratic gains in House races.
He characterized California’s election system as fundamentally corrupt: “California is one of the most dishonest elections ever. They send out tens of billions of ballots to people all over the place. Many of those people get two and three ballots and they come back. California’s a disgrace on voting and they’re doing something that is very illegal.”
Trump confirmed the lawsuit would come from DOJ: “So we’re, we have, we o- — or we’ll be suing California on the five seats. The Department of Justice. Yes. Being headed by the Department of–”
For context, California uses universal mail-in voting, sending ballots to all registered voters. This system has been targeted by Trump and allies as potentially fraudulent, though election security experts and courts have found no evidence of widespread fraud in California’s system. The claim of sending “billions” of ballots appears to be an exaggeration given California’s population of about 39 million total residents.
Saudi Arabia Meeting and F-35 Sale
Trump confirmed an upcoming meeting with Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman and indicated he’s considering approving a sale of F-35 fighter jets to the kingdom.
“We’re honoring, uh, Saudi Arabia, the Crown Prince,” Trump said of next week’s meeting.
Regarding the fighter jet sale: “Well, they wanted to buy a lot of jets. We make the best jets. We make the best missiles. You saw that when we took out the nuclear capability of Iran. No, you know, for 22 years they wanted to do that. No president had the guts to do it. We did it. And Iran is a different place.”
Trump noted Iran’s changed position: “By the way, Iran wants to negotiate a deal too. Everybody wants to negotiate with us now.”
He credited military strength for diplomatic leverage: “If we didn’t have military strength, if we didn’t rebuild our military in my first term and now we continue to do it, Biden dissipated it by giving a chunk to, uh, the Taliban.”
On the specific F-35 sale, Trump said: “Uh, I’m looking at that. They’ve asked me to look at it. They wanna buy a lot of, 35. But they wanna buy actually more than that, fighter jets.”
For context, the F-35 Lightning II is America’s most advanced stealth fighter jet. Sales to Middle Eastern countries have been controversial due to concerns about maintaining Israel’s “qualitative military edge” in the region. Previous administrations have been cautious about F-35 sales to Arab states.
Abraham Accords Expansion
Trump indicated he hopes to bring Saudi Arabia into the Abraham Accords, the normalization agreements between Israel and several Arab states brokered during his first term.
“The Abraham Accords will be a part. We’re gonna be discussing — I hope that Saudi Arabia will be going into the Abraham Accords fairly shortly. We’ve had tremendous interest in the Abraham Accords since we put Iran outta business,” Trump said.
The Abraham Accords were signed in 2020 between Israel and the United Arab Emirates and Bahrain, with Morocco and Sudan later joining. The agreements normalized diplomatic relations between Israel and these Arab states. Getting Saudi Arabia to join would be considered a major diplomatic achievement, as Saudi Arabia is the most influential Arab state and home to Islam’s holiest sites. However, Saudi Arabia has historically insisted on progress toward Palestinian statehood as a precondition for normalizing relations with Israel.
Citation
“Press Gaggle: Donald Trump Speaks to Reporters on Board Air Force One – November 14, 2025.” Factbase, Roll Call, 14 Nov. 2025.