Opinion|Sean Spicer Has Regrets. But He Still Believes in Trump.
https://www.nytimes.com/2025/01/19/opinion/sean-spicer-trump-president.html
Jan. 19, 2025, 6:00 a.m. ET
By Sean Spicer
Video by Adam B. Ellick and Jonah M. Kessel
Mr. Spicer served as Donald Trump’s first White House press secretary. Mr. Ellick is the executive producer for Opinion Video. Mr. Kessel is the deputy director for Opinion Video.
Why did the first Trump administration go off the rails so quickly and spectacularly? And will his second administration do the same, or will it end up being more effective than many people expect? Sean Spicer played a central role in the chaos eight years ago as Donald Trump’s first White House press secretary: His outlandish claims about presidential inauguration crowd sizes were illustrative of the circuslike atmosphere in which aides and advisers preened and performed to please the ringmaster, Trump, and little got done. In a Times Opinion video, Mr. Spicer shares his regrets about the crowd size debacle and draws on his experience with Mr. Trump in power to argue that his second term will be profoundly different from the fractious first.
Mr. Spicer, who has worked in politics for more than 30 years and served as the communications director of the Republican National Committee, says the Trump team at the White House in early 2017 was no team at all but, rather, a cast of characters who didn’t know one another well and got swept up in the opportunity to promote their own brands, which led to infighting and personality wars. This time around, he says, Mr. Trump has a team of long-term allies who, from Day 1, will prioritize policy over personality.
If you didn’t like Mr. Trump, the chaos of his first term was pretty useful; it impeded his agenda. But no one is peacocking and leaking nearly as much this time around, and Mr. Spicer argues that’s a sign of things to come: The next Trump White House will stay on the rails and have a very different impact.
Adam B. Ellick is the director and executive producer of Opinion Video at The Times, which he founded in 2018. He has produced Pulitzer Prize, Oscar and Emmy-winning video journalism and films. @aellick • Facebook
Jonah M. Kessel is the deputy director of Opinion Video at The New York Times. Mr. Kessel’s video journalism is a hybrid of explanatory and investigative short form documentary and other innovative forms of visual journalism. @jonah_kessel • Facebook