Skip to content
Home » David Remnick Interviews Hillary Clinton at 92NY (Transcript)

David Remnick Interviews Hillary Clinton at 92NY (Transcript)

Read the full transcript of former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton in conversation with David Remnick at the 92nd Street Y in New York City, June 15, 2026.

Editor’s Note: In this candid discussion, Hillary Clinton reflects on the current state of American politics, characterizing the ongoing influence of Donald Trump and “Trumpism” as a sustained authoritarian threat. She also provides an introspective look at the Democratic Party’s recent electoral challenges and discusses the complexities of navigating geopolitical tensions in the Middle East.

Opening Remarks

DAVID REMNICK: I am so tired of getting standing ovations every time I walk in a room. It’s really tiresome. Oh, hi! Thank you for doing this.

HILLARY CLINTON: Oh, thank you so much, David.

Trump and the Threat of Authoritarianism

DAVID REMNICK: Secretary Clinton, in your book, Something Lost, Something Gained, you write about your state of mind after the reelection of Donald Trump. You describe yourself as someone who remains an optimist that worries a lot. Now, we all worry, but I want to grasp the extent of your agony. And I want to begin with a big question. Does Donald Trump and Trumpism represent a real and sustained era of authoritarianism in this country?

HILLARY CLINTON: Well, first, David, thank you for doing this with me. And it’s always great to be here at the 92nd Street Y. So thanks, everybody, for gathering.

And I really believe that he does represent the threat of authoritarianism. The people who enable him, who support him, who follow him have clearly decided that his kind of performance politics, his deliberate cruelty and behavior that has never been seen by any of us in an American president before, is exactly what they want to see for the country.

Now, the good news is his favorability is in the mid-30s. People who had supported him not because he was a wannabe authoritarian, but because he promised to lower prices and create a better future for people and their families, they’ve seen the reality. It doesn’t match the rhetoric. And so they have moved away from him.

But he is doubling down. He’s doubling down on his impulsiveness. And it’s very worrisome to me because I’ll end with this. I teach at Columbia University now, of course, with the dean there. She and I have been on this stage together. It’s called Inside the Situation Room. And we talk about the traits of leaders, their behavior, their psychology.

And there is a view that is rooted in how people make decisions — all of us, not just leaders — about what happens when someone finds themselves in what’s called the domain of loss. It’s a psychological concept. And almost counterintuitively, when people feel they are losing, they very frequently take greater risks. They double down on their behavior.

And that’s what I’m now worried about, because he’s lashing out. He’s demanding that we accept his version of reality, which is unhinged from the actual world that we live in and the actual consequences of his actions. So I think we have to be extremely vigilant and just ready to push back every chance we get.

Recognizing Trump as a Political Danger

DAVID REMNICK: You’ve been a New Yorker for a long time. You were around when Donald Trump was not a politician. You would see him here and there in New York City. At what point did you begin to see him as something other than a kind of figure in the jokersphere, the Spy Magazine aspect of New York City? Did you sense him as a political danger?

HILLARY CLINTON: Probably when he began to lead a movement questioning Barack Obama’s birthright citizenship. And before then, I was not aware. I hadn’t read Art of the Deal. I hadn’t followed some of his public utterances. Allegedly, he told the man who helped him — or wrote The Art of the Deal — the only book he had on his bedside was Mein Kampf. I did not know that.

DAVID REMNICK: Big seller.

HILLARY CLINTON: That’s right. And he also ran full-page ads accusing Ronald Reagan of weakness. So there had been a few eruptions that I was unaware of. I kind of viewed him as exactly the sort of figure you described.

But when he began to do the big lie about first Senator Obama, then President Obama, that’s when I began to pay attention and wondering, what’s really behind this? Why is he doing this? And so relentlessly — it didn’t matter.

And I remember talking to President Obama about it. And President Obama, like so many of us, it’s like, “Ah, who cares? I’m not going to respond to that.” And what we have learned is how important it is to respond. It used to be you could ignore that kind of outlandish claim and it wouldn’t last for long. But with the internet, it lives forever. And so he began to demonstrate his understanding of the new information ecosystem that we’re in.

Understanding Trump’s Base

DAVID REMNICK: How has your understanding of his support evolved? You were criticized a lot, probably rightly, for using the word “deplorables” for many of his followers. But how do you view the evolution of his followers and what it is that they want most of all from him?

HILLARY CLINTON: Well, first of all, I said only about half.

DAVID REMNICK: Were.

HILLARY CLINTON: So to be fair—

DAVID REMNICK: Well, are you doubling down on deplorable?

HILLARY CLINTON: Yeah, but I have to say — I gave a speech, for example, about something called the alt-right, which the press had no idea what I was talking about. Certainly the public had no idea what I was talking about. But I was beginning to see this really disturbing rhetoric.