Tracking Trump: The Signal message saga continues (2025)

Tracking Trump: The Signal message saga continues (1)Tracking Trump: The Signal message saga continues (2)

President Trump is under fire for his response to a Signal group chat that inadvertently looped in a journalist while revealing sensitive military details. In the same week, he launched plans for auto tariffs and voting restrictions.

Here's our recap of major developments:

Journalist added to Houthi attack Signal chat

The White House has stacked claim atop claim this week to explain how Jeffrey Goldberg, editor-in-chief of The Atlantic, ended up in a Signal chat with Trump officials who discussed in granular detail attack plans on Houthi targets in Yemen.

  • The administration ultimately carried out the airstrikes in Yemen on March 15, the same day the Signal discussion concluded, Goldberg revealed in an explosive article on Monday.
  • "1415: Strike Drones on Target (THIS IS WHEN THE FIRST BOMBS WILL DEFINITELY DROP, pending earlier 'Trigger Based' targets)," Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth said in one message Goldberg revealed.
  • The journalist initially hesitated to reveal some details in the interest of national security. That is until the White House's narrative began to take shape.

Full Signal thread revealed

The Trump administration attacked Goldberg's credibility, with Hegseth saying Monday that "Nobody was texting war plans" and calling the journalist "deceitful and highly discredited" in a press briefing.

  • Trump claimed on Tuesday there was "no classified information as I understand it" in the chat.

So Goldberg released the full Signal chat thread between 18 senior Trump officials on Wednesday, writing in The Atlantic:

"If this text had been received by someone hostile to American interests—or someone merely indiscreet, and with access to social media—the Houthis would have had time to prepare for what was meant to be a surprise attack on their strongholds. The consequences for American pilots could have been catastrophic."

Poll: Even Republicans say Trump's Signalgate scandal is serious

The Signal fallout

National security adviser Mike Waltz told Fox News on Tuesday he takes "full responsibility" for mistakenly adding Goldberg to the chat. However, Trump said the mistake wouldn't end in Waltz's termination, that he "has learned a lesson, and he's a good man."

Zoom out: The government watchdog group American Oversight sued Trump administration officials on Tuesday. On Thursday, U.S. District Judge James Boasberg ordered the government to preserve the chat messages from March 11-15.

  • The administration has until Monday to explain their preservation methods, Axios' Sareen Habeshian writes.

Trump pulls UN nominee

President Trump withdrew Rep. Elise Stefanik's nomination for United Nations ambassador on Thursday, opting to keep her in the House of Representatives, with only a 218-213 seat advantage in the House.

  • Trump cited the need to maintain every Republican seat in Congress to advance his "America First Agenda."
  • The move reflects growing concerns within the GOP about their slim majority and the potential impact on upcoming legislative initiatives, Axios Hans Nichols, Alex Isenstadt and Justin Green write.

The president appointed Republican Georgia state Sen. Brandon Beach as U.S. Treasurer on Thursday.

Auto tariffs coming next week

The auto industry, already struggling to compete with China, was thrown its latest curve ball on Wednesday when Trump announced 25% tariffs on cars and car parts produced outside the U.S.

  • The tariffs are set to start on April 2 and cast further uncertainty on an industry already impacted by Trump's "will-he-or-won't-he trade saga," Axios' Courtenay Brown writes.
  • Trump's tariff threats on Canada and Mexico are expected to drive massive increases in U.S. automakers' production costs as are the president's global steel and aluminum tariffs.
  • Brown notes about 45% of light vehicles sold in the U.S. are imported, per S&P Global Mobility.

Trump pushes agenda through order

The president signed an executive order Tuesday ushering in dramatic changes to federal elections while lauding the order as "the farthest-reaching executive action taken in the history" of the U.S. to "Secure our Elections."

  • It includes a proof of citizenship requirement and aims to prevent states from counting mail-in ballots that arrive after Election Day, Axios' Rebecca Falconer and Jeremy Duda write.
  • It was one of several orders the president signed.

Trump penned orders to:

  • End collective bargaining with federal employee unions in national security Thursday. Go deeper.
  • Pardon Devon Archer, the ex-Hunter Biden associate convicted of fraud, Tuesday. He testified before Congress about Biden family business dealings. Go deeper.
  • Consolidate financial systems, decrease offices on non-Treasury payments, and stop issuing paper checks — Social Security included by Sept. 30. Trump signed those orders Tuesday. Go deeper.
  • Strip law firm Tuesday and target a lawyer in ex-special counsel Robert Mueller's probe into Trump's first election. He signed a similar order targeting WilmerHale law firm on Thursday, leading to lawsuits from both firms by Friday. Go deeper.

Zoom in: The president also signed an executive order Thursday to reshape the Smithsonian Institution and remove its "improper ideology" on topics of race and gender.

In other news: Trump on Friday commuted the nearly 10-year prison sentence of Ozy Media founder Carlos Watson, who was convicted of wire fraud and other crimes, Axios' Sara Fischer writes.

Editor's note: This story has been updated with the latest news.

More from Axios:

  • Tracking the foreign nationals detained by ICE as tourists or U.S. residents
  • New Trump order pours gasoline on DOGE's data quest
  • Trump administration notifies Congress of USAID shutdown
  • Judge blocks Trump administration from dismantling CFPB
Tracking Trump: The Signal message saga continues (2025)
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