How Trump Is Talking Differently in His Second Term

Jonah Smith

One year into his second term, President Trump is speaking far more words in public than in the first year of his first term, often in more unscripted settings, and talking less about Obamacare and jobs and more about foreign countries and consumer goods, according to an analysis of data from Roll Call’s Factba.se.

Words spoken

Overall, Mr. Trump has delivered fewer scheduled speeches and prepared remarks, and spoken at fewer news conferences. But he has given more interviews and engaged in nearly six times as many so-called press gaggles, unscheduled remarks made to journalists in passing.

And on average, he has spoken many more words at each event than in 2017, part of a trend of longer, less focused public appearances.

Average number of words spoken at events

Event type 2017 2025
News conferences 2,531 5,374
Interviews 2,985 4,414
Remarks and speeches 1,230 3,980
Press ‘gaggles’ (unscheduled) 1,245 1,377

Note: “Interviews” includes only aired or published segments.

Mr. Trump’s aides say his propensity to speak his mind makes him “the most transparent and accessible president in American history.”

Our analysis includes all of Mr. Trump’s available public remarks from his two “first years in office,” in 2017 and 2025. (It doesn’t include Mr. Trump’s activity on social media, where he has primarily posted on his own network, Truth Social, in his second term.)

The results help show some of the ways he has approached his second term differently.

His agenda has shifted

Eight years have passed since Mr. Trump’s first term began, and his priorities have changed. We looked at the words he said most often in the first year of his first term that he never repeated in 2025, and the words he’s saying now that he never said in 2017, according to the data.

Most frequent words that were said in only one of these two years

2017

1.

repeal

2.

collusion

3.

renegotiating

4.

deductibles

5.

accountable

6.

ignored

7.

oppression

8.

simplification

9.

addiction

10.

leaks

2025

1.

inflation

2.

A.I.

3.

eggs

4.

gasoline

5.

autopen

6.

chips

7.

tips

8.

drill

9.

groceries

10.

crypto

Note: Excludes proper names.

Many of the words from 2017 that have not reappeared refer to repealing or revising Obamacare, simplifying the tax code and insisting there was “no collusion” with Russia in the 2016 election.

The most frequent words of 2025 with no record of being mentioned in 2017 relate to pocketbook issues and technology. There is also Mr. Trump’s claim about former President Joseph R. Biden Jr.’s use of an autopen to sign documents, an assertion Mr. Trump has employed to cast doubt on the legitimacy of Mr. Biden’s official actions.

(It is possible that Mr. Trump uttered one of these words in public when we have no record of it, but Factba.se aims to include every one of his public remarks.)

On the economy, Mr. Trump’s focus on “jobs” has fallen when compared with the first year of his first term, while other terms like “investments” have climbed.

Some common economic terms

Mentions per 100,000 words

word 2017 2025
deals 91.9 138.4
tariffs 3.7 112.3
jobs 139.2 28.9
investments 16.8 25.4

Note: Largest values in each group are highlighted.

He also frequently mentions specific companies and products. He is still talking a lot about the news media, defense contractors and automobile manufacturers, but he is talking a lot more about sectors like big tech and pharmaceuticals than he did in 2017.

Specific companies and products

Mentions per 100,000 words

Industry 2017 2025
Media CNN, The New York Times, Fox, … 25.6 24.8
Technology Apple, Nvidia, Intel, … 11.5 19.4
Aerospace and defense Boeing, Lockheed Martin, … 16.4 14.3
Automakers Ford, General Motors, Toyota, … 17.7 10.9
Pharmaceuticals Eli Lilly, Pfizer, … 1.7 7.0
Industry and manufacturing U.S. Steel, Nippon, … 5.1 6.4
Social media TikTok, Twitter/X, Truth Social, … 2.4 5.3
Finance SoftBank, Goldman Sachs, … 2.6 2.5
Retail Walmart, Home Depot, … 1.2 2.2
Energy Exxon-Mobil, Con Edison, … 1.7 1.5
Cryptocurrency Bitcoin, Coinbase, … 0.0 1.4

Mr. Trump’s references have been shaped by his priorities and the people in his orbit. In the roughly first six months of the year, during which Elon Musk oversaw the Department of Government Efficiency, Mr. Trump mentioned Tesla 20 times. In the second half of the year, after Mr. Musk left the White House, he mentioned Tesla only twice.

He’s more concerned with foreign countries

Mr. Trump’s mentions of other countries have increased significantly compared with 2017 amid wars, tariffs and the capture of the leader of Venezuela.

Mentions of foreign countries

He still talks about China the most (and more than he did in 2017). He has also talked more about Ukraine, Iran, Israel and Venezuela amid conflicts or military actions there. Notably, his mentions of Mexico have fallen.

Most frequently mentioned countries

Mentions per 100,000 words

country 2017 2025
China 51.7 76.3
Ukraine 4.1 36.0
Iran 15.4 32.3
Canada 11.7 26.7
Israel 18.5 23.4
India 3.8 19.9
Japan 17.0 16.3
Mexico 26.2 15.3
Saudi Arabia 7.7 11.9
Venezuela 5.2 11.3

(Taken together, Greenland and Denmark ranked 16th in 2025.)

This heightened international focus even extends to the companies he’s mentioning. In the first year of his second term, Mr. Trump has mentioned many foreign automakers that he rarely or never mentioned in 2017, while talking less than he did about the Big Three domestic automakers: Ford, General Motors and Chrysler, part of Stellantis.

Total mentions of auto companies

Industry 2017 2025
General Motors 43 30
Toyota 8 28
Ford 54 28
Honda 0 23
Tesla 0 22
BMW 0 16
Volkswagen 0 15
Hyundai 1 15
Mercedes-Benz 0 14
Chrysler/Stellantis 33 13
Nissan 0 5
Ferrari 0 3
Great Wall Motor 0 1
Jaguar 0 1
Volvo 1 1

Note: Automakers are grouped by their owners where relevant.

He’s using even more superlatives

Mr. Trump’s language has also grown more hyperbolic. In his second term, he has applied explicit judgments across the board, both good and bad.

Use of superlatives and strong adjectives

Occurrences per 100,000 words

word 2017 2025
best 42.7 47.6
biggest 24.7 44.3
terrible 26.1 36.9
greatest 22.8 35.5
horrible 29.3 33.6
worst 11.8 25.5
largest 13.3 16.0

He brings up Joe Biden a lot

The president’s concern with his predecessor has been a hallmark of this term, with Mr. Trump pinning many of the country’s problems on Mr. Biden.

In the first year of his second term, he has mentioned Mr. Biden over eight times as much as he mentioned former President Barack Obama in 2017.

Mentions of previous president

About the Data

Data includes every appearance by President Trump as recorded by Roll Call’s Factba.se from Jan. 20 to Dec. 31 in 2017 and 2025.

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