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Transcript: Chris Cuomo Interviews Ian Bremmer

Read the full transcript of political scientist Ian Bremmer’s interview on The Chris Cuomo Project on How Trump’s Return Is Reshaping Global Power, Mar 18, 2025.

TRANSCRIPT:

Introduction

[CHRIS CUOMO:] Is Trump making things better or worse for America on the world stage? I’m Chris Cuomo, welcome to the Chris Cuomo Project. Ian Bremmer has become such a success in business and in media because he is a citizen of the world. And he goes around, not just as a consultant, but as a consumer of understanding, of perspective.

And he has a take on what the Trump administration is doing that may be doing America dirty, not today, but sooner than any of us would want to imagine. The idea of isolation being isolating from progress and what drives the world forward is a really scary proposition. And Ian Bremmer understands it really well in a way that even I can.

So here he is with his understanding of where we are and where we’re going to be. Ian Bremmer.

[CHRIS CUOMO:] Thank you for doing this.

[IAN BREMMER:] Absolutely.

[CHRIS CUOMO:] I appreciate you. I’m a huge fan of yours and I appreciate your friendship.

I tell the audience every time you’re on with me that this, if you want to know why I think the way I do or why I know what I know, you and what you’re doing with your outfits have become a clearinghouse of ideas for me.

[IAN BREMMER:] Well, the friendship is mutual and I’m very happy always to be with you.

A Unique Global Moment

[CHRIS CUOMO:] I was saying, Ian, before we started a really storied career and well warranted. But I honestly do believe and you may not want to hear this, but I do believe that you are just coming into what is going to be the period of most need and resonance of your level of analysis and understanding of geopolitics. I think you’re just entering.

[IAN BREMMER:] You say that for kind of a bad reason, right? Which is that the information environment is so falling apart.

[CHRIS CUOMO:] Yes.

[IAN BREMMER:] For people in this country. Yes.

[CHRIS CUOMO:] But there’s a reciprocal, right? There’s a reciprocal need. So people are looking for good faith actors. And there’s so few people that they can look at and say, so what is Ian selling? Where is he coming from? You know, he doesn’t seem to bash one of these sides enough for me to know his type.

[CHRIS CUOMO:] And I’m happy. I’m happy.

[IAN BREMMER:] Well, you don’t belong enough to understand that. Like I mean, I’ll get it wrong plenty, but I am a good faith. I’m telling you what I actually think.

[CHRIS CUOMO:] And so when you look at where we are, one, is it remarkable? Do you believe historically we’re in a special place?

[IAN BREMMER:] Oh, yeah.

[CHRIS CUOMO:] Just because of Trump?

[IAN BREMMER:] No, no, no. Trump is the principal symptom and beneficiary of a breakdown in how people think about the U.S. political system.

But I mean, much more broadly, this is a unique global moment because the United States is now undoing its own global order. It’s saying the things that the Americans historically built up and believe in, like collective security and alliances, like global free trade and globalization, like rule of law, like the promotion of democracy. All of those things we think have either been corrupted or don’t work for us or we’re spending too much. Other people are free riding, whatever the constellation of reasons, we’re done with it. And we’re now unwinding that order. That is utterly unique.

That has never happened in our lives before. And it’s going to create enormous chaos all around the world.

[CHRIS CUOMO:] The basic assumption is less involvement, more resources at home, less exposure, better for America.

The Appeal of Disruption

[IAN BREMMER:] Absolutely. You know that what we’ve been spending all of this and our corporations have gotten super rich. But what about the average American? And, you know, this goes back to you look at the people that voted in November and they voted on issues.

They voted on immigration and abortion and inflation. And some of them even voted on Gaza. Very few of them voted on democracy as their top issue. But of those that said democracy matters, most of those people voted for Trump. And the reason they voted for Trump is not because they all thought he was such a paragon of American virtue, but because they thought that over the course of decades, the U.S. political system had been captured by special interests, by big money, Democrat and Republican, and that it wasn’t helping them. So they wanted someone who was going to disrupt that system.

And Trump was the great disruptor that was available on the stage.

[CHRIS CUOMO:] So what’s the answer for you? What’s so bad? What’s so bad about what he wants to do?

[IAN BREMMER:] Well, there is a core of truth, as you know, Chris, in so much of what he says. There’s a core of truth. It’s very rare that Trump makes a big statement and it’s 100% wrong.

My problem is that when you take a chainsaw to things that you have built up over a long period of time, like NATO, and take a chainsaw to the support that you’ve given Ukraine for three years, take a chainsaw to USAID, and you shut down 87% of it, that will have significant, long-term, unintended consequences, which will hurt us, won’t just hurt the world.

[CHRIS CUOMO:] Level of confidence in that?

[IAN BREMMER:] Very high, very high.

And by the way, it won’t just hurt us. It’s also going to hurt lots of other people around the world who I actually care about as a fellow human being. I understand that we should care more about Americans than people that aren’t American, but I also feel like being American is kind of a roll of the dice, kind of random chance that you and I are so lucky that we happen to be Americans.

And I feel like, at least for those of us that are in a position of power, that we have some obligation to do things for more than just Americans.