image missing
Date: 2025-08-22 Page is: DBtxt003.php txt00028365
THE WASHINGTON PRESS CORPS
GRIDIRON DINNER

At Gridiron Dinner, Jokes About Trump, Musk and Russia Abound
But President Trump wasn’t around to hear any of the barbs thrown at the annual D.C. event.


Gov. Wes Moore of Maryland was one of the headline speakers at the Gridiron dinner.Credit...Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images

Original article: https://www.nytimes.com/2025/03/15/us/politics/gridiron-dinner-trump-musk-russia-moore.html
Peter Burgess COMMENTARY



Peter Burgess
At Gridiron Dinner, Jokes About Trump, Musk and Russia Abound

But President Trump wasn’t around to hear any of the barbs thrown at the annual D.C. event.

By Shawn McCreesh ... Reporting from Washington

March 15, 2025

The annual Gridiron Club dinner in Washington on Saturday featured jokes about President Trump, the breakdown of the global order, Russia, Democrats’ uncertain future and, of course, Elon Musk.

One of the headliners was Gov. Wes Moore of Maryland, a rising star in the Democratic Party. He acknowledged that his speaking slot was a sign of his own political ambitions, while making a jab at the White House’s current occupant.

“If I actually wanted to be president, I wouldn’t do any of this,” he said. “Instead, I would take my case directly to the people who are in charge of our democracy. The Kremlin.”

Even after all these years, jokes about Mr. Trump and Russia still play with the official Washington crowd. Those in the Hyatt basement, which was packed with reporters, editors, television anchors and ambassadors, laughed along.

But Mr. Trump wasn’t there to hear any of it.

He and top members of his administration skipped the dinner, which is one of those old-fashioned Washington rituals. Presidents dating back to William McKinley and Theodore Roosevelt have attended the event hosted by the Gridiron Club, an association of top journalists that was formed in 1885.

It has historically been a chance for a president to schmooze with the people covering him, as well as to show an ability to make jokes about the political fights of the day — and take a few, too.

Mr. Trump skipped the dinner in 2017, the first year he was president, but he did attend in 2018. That year, he made some self-deprecating jokes about the turmoil of his administration. (“I like chaos. It really is good. Who’s going to be the next to leave? Steve Miller, or Melania?”) That was the first and last time he attended.

President Joseph R. Biden Jr. went last year and cracked jokes about the upcoming presidential campaign that have not exactly aged well. (“One candidate’s too old and mentally unfit to be president,” he said that year. “The other guy’s me.”)

This year, with no president present, lesser political and media players were left to fill the void. The jokes they told offered a snapshot of this moment in the capital.

The PBS journalist Judy Woodruff opened up the room with jokes about Mr. Musk’s fathering so many children and Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth’s drinking. She ripped on the Democrats, too: “At the joint session, they were more lost and disorganized than Patrick Mahomes at the Super Bowl,” she said, referring to the Kansas City quarterback.

The Republican headliner was Representative Lisa McClain of Michigan. “I was also told Robert Kennedy was going to be here tonight, but unfortunately he couldn’t make it,” she said, “he’s got the measles.”

“Now let’s talk a little bit about Pam Bondi,” Ms. McClain said. The rumor, she said, was that Mr. Trump wanted his attorney general to be someone with “daily experience about how the criminal justice system worked, which makes sense.”

“But unfortunately,” she added, “we had to pick Pam because the Menendez brothers were unavailable.”

The representative also went in on Senator Chuck Schumer of New York, who has faced a fierce backlash for opposing and then supporting Republicans’ spending bill this past week to avoid a government shutdown. “Look, I feel very sorry for Chuck Schumer and the way he’s been treated by his own party, even the sanctuary cities won’t let him in.” That got a few low laughs. “Too soon?” Ms. McClain asked.

There were also skits.

One song-and-dance number involved a man dressed as Mr. Musk in his tech support T-shirt waving a chain saw around, singing about his turn toward the far right: “I’ll turn the G.O.P. into the AfD,” he sang.

One of the less successful acts centered on two men pretending to be the House minority leader, Hakeem Jeffries, and Mr. Schumer, the Senate minority leader, covered in leaves. “Lost in the woods” was the chorus. (“No one cares about your pronouns when you’re lost in the woods.”)

Another number portrayed Mr. Biden dressed as an Amtrak employee. It seemed to get a marginally better reception than the one with the leaves.

Yet another featured a portrayal of two other high-profile Democrats, with Representative Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez of New York fighting with Senator John Fetterman of Pennsylvania. She accused him of being a MAGA adherent in disguise, and he accused her of being a communist. Another act had a mock Usha Vance singing about being a phony populist.

There were jokes that few people outside that wonky room might understand, such as when Terry McAuliffe, the former Virginia governor, made a reference to the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars, a nonpartisan think tank. (It is being targeted by the Trump administration.)

Margaret Brennan of CBS shouted out members of the diplomatic corps from Britain, France, Australia and the European Union. “You know,” she said, “all of America’s enemies.”

Then she introduced the Ukrainian ambassador — there was no joke told — and the many journalists in the room stood up to clap.

Shawn McCreesh is a White House reporter for The Times covering the Trump administration.

A version of this article appears in print on March 17, 2025, The Trump Administration’s First 100 Days
  • Halting Regulations: The White House will soon move to rapidly repeal or freeze rules that affect health, food, workplace safety, transportation and more.
  • The Deportation Effort: The Trump administration sent 238 migrants to a prison in El Salvador under a wartime act, calling them members of a Venezuelan gang. But a New York Times investigation found little evidence of criminal backgrounds or links to the gang.
  • Trade War: President Trump’s trade fight with China threatens to choke off negotiations about other issues like Taiwan, fentanyl, TikTok and more.
  • Cutting the State Department: The Trump administration could cut nearly 50 percent of the State Department’s funding next fiscal year, according to an internal memo laying out a downsizing plan.
  • Rescinding NPR and PBS Funding: Trump administration officials want legislators to rescind $1.1 billion for the Corporation for Public Broadcasting, which provides some support for public media.
  • Harvard: Federal officials said they would freeze $2 billion in grants to Harvard after the university said it would not submit to requests to overhaul hiring and report international students who break rules.
  • Wrongly Deported Man: In an Oval Office meeting with President Trump, President Nayib Bukele of El Salvador said that he would not return a Maryland man who was wrongly deported from the United States and sent to a notorious Salvadoran prison.
How We Report on the Trump Administration

Hundreds of readers asked about our coverage of the president. Times editors and reporters responded to some of the most common questions.

Editors’ Picks

  • 13 Unforgettable Looks at Coachella
  • Astoria the Celebrity Turkey Returns to Ritzy Midtown Manhattan
  • She’s Young, Trump-Friendly, and Has a White House Press Pass
Trump Administration: Live Updates Updated April 15, 2025, 2:09 p.m.
  • Canada conditionally drops retaliatory tariffs on U.S.-made cars and trucks.
  • More than 20,000 I.R.S. employees offer to resign, adding to an exodus.
  • Trump threatens Harvard’s tax-exempt status a day after pulling billions in federal funds.


SITE COUNT Amazing and shiny stats
Copyright © 2005-2021 Peter Burgess. All rights reserved. This material may only be used for limited low profit purposes: e.g. socio-enviro-economic performance analysis, education and training.