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Trump demand that Netflix fire Susan Rice is an extraordinary use of presidential power

Netflix wants President Donald Trump’s stamp of approval as it maneuvers to buy Warner Bros. Discovery.

Now, Trump has a demand for Netflix: unseat board member Susan Rice.

In normal times, we would all be marveling at the spectacle of the US president telling a company in the midst of a merger fight (Paramount also wants to buy Warner Bros. Discovery) how to structure its board. During Trump 2.0, though, this has become standard stuff. Trump routinely tells companies to fire someone he doesn’t like or do something he does like.

That doesn’t mean Trump always gets what he wants. The demands alone, however, are an extraordinary use of power. We should make sure we don’t become inured to it.

Trump’s Truth Social post is a reminder that the future of Warner Bros. Discovery will run through the White House, no matter what Trump says at any given moment. (Refresher: In December, Trump said, “I’ll be involved” in the fight between Netflix and Paramount. Earlier this month, he announced that “I’ve decided I shouldn’t be involved.” Now he’s telling Netflix it will “pay the consequences” if it doesn’t fire Rice, which sure seems like he’s involved again.)

Trump himself doesn’t have the authority to stop Warner Bros. Discovery from selling itself to Netflix or Paramount, which is controlled by David Ellison and his father, the prominent Trump supporter, Larry Ellison. He can, however, instruct Attorney General Pam Bondi to sue to stop a deal on antitrust grounds.

Modern presidents have traditionally assumed an arm’s-length distance from federal law enforcement. And it’s entirely possible that any other president’s Department of Justice would also look into an antitrust case against Netflix, given its enormous market power.

Trump, however, has made it clear that he expects Bondi to act on his behalf. So if he doesn’t want Netflix to buy Warner Bros. Discovery, he can certainly make it more difficult for them.

Which makes it puzzling that Rice, who held senior roles in the Clinton, Obama, and Biden administrations, would sound off on a podcast, announcing that “elites” and “corporate interests” who accommodated Trump would one day “be held accountable by those who come in opposition to Trump and win at the ballot box.

This wasn’t a mere gaffe or misstatement. She went on at length. It was, regardless of how she intended it, a provocation aimed at the Trump White House — at the exact moment the company she’s supposed to help govern is seeking Trump’s approval.

I’ve asked Netflix for comment on Rice’s comments and Trump’s response.

We should also note that Trump’s most consistent trait is his inconsistency and that he frequently reverses himself. Last summer, for instance, he announced that Intel CEO Lip-Bu Tan was “highly CONFLICTED” and must resign. Days later, Trump met with Tan and described him as a “success.” Weeks after that, the US government acquired 10% of Intel.

Nor does Trump always follow through. Last fall, he demanded that Microsoft fire Lisa Monaco, an executive who had also worked for Clinton, Obama, and Biden. Monaco still works for Microsoft.

However, just because we don’t know how serious Trump is about pushing Rice out of Netflix — or how his administration will ultimately rule on the Netflix/Paramount race — doesn’t mean we should shrug this off.

We’re in a place where the president routinely tells companies how to run their businesses and threatens them if they don’t comply. If we get used to that, we shouldn’t be surprised when future presidents decide they can do it, too.

Disclosure: Mathias Döpfner, the CEO of Business Insider’s parent company, is a Netflix board member.




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Take a look inside ‘The Beast,’ Trump’s $1.5 million bulletproof presidential limousine

Updated

  • US presidents are driven in a heavily armored limousine nicknamed “The Beast.” 
  • It features a secure communications system and a fridge stocked with the president’s blood type.
  • Military cargo aircraft transport the presidential limousine for use abroad.

When US presidents aren’t flying on Air Force One or taking helicopter trips in Marine One, they’re driven around in a presidential limousine nicknamed “The Beast.”

Weighing 20,000 pounds and outfitted with advanced security and communications systems, the newest model of “The Beast” debuted during the first Trump administration in 2018. It reportedly cost around $1.5 million to build.

The vehicle made headlines in August when Russian President Vladimir Putin rode in the limousine alongside President Donald Trump as the two met in Alaska to discuss the war in Ukraine.

Take a look inside the famous vehicle.

US presidents travel in a secure limousine nicknamed “The Beast.”

“The Beast” waited on the tarmac as President Joe Biden disembarked Air Force One in Helsinki.

Official White House Photo by Adam Schultz

US presidents rode Lincoln limousines for most of the 20th century until the 1980s, when the Reagan administration switched to Cadillacs.

The latest model of the presidential limousine was commissioned by the US Secret Service in 2014 and used for the first time in 2018 by President Donald Trump.

Designed to look like a longer version of a Cadillac XT6, the chassis of the car is actually that of a Chevrolet Kodiak truck produced by General Motors, NBC News reported. The vehicle weighs around 20,000 pounds and cost around $1.5 million to build.

The heavily armored vehicle is bulletproof, blast-resistant, and sealed to withstand biochemical attacks.


The Beast presidential limo

Members of the Secret Service outside the presidential limousine.

SAUL LOEB/AFP via Getty Images

While details about the limousine’s security measures remain classified, NBC News reported that the vehicle features a night-vision system, tear gas firing capabilities, and door handles that can be electrified to prevent intruders.

The windows are believed to be 3 inches thick, and the vehicle’s armor is around 8 inches thick.

“The Beast” is also equipped with medical supplies, including a refrigerator stocked with the president’s blood type.


Donald Trump and UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer in The Beast.

Donald Trump and UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer in the US presidential motorcade.

Official White House Photo by Daniel Torok

The limousine’s secure communications system can dispatch the launch codes for nuclear weapons.

The presidential seal appears throughout the design of the car.


The presidential seal is seen inside the door of US President Joe Biden's limousine

The presidential seal inside the door of “The Beast.”

ANDREW CABALLERO-REYNOLDS/AFP via Getty Images)

The seal, featuring an eagle holding an olive branch and 13 arrows in its talons below a banner reading “E Pluribus Unum” (“Out of many, one”), appears on both the interior and exterior of the passenger door.

The limousine can seat up to seven people.


Joe Biden and Jill Biden in The Beast

President Joe Biden and first lady Jill Biden waved as they rode in the presidential limousine.

Official White House Photo by Adam Schultz

The interior features water bottle holders and plush leather seats. Previous presidential limousines have also included a fold-out desk, according to the US Secret Service.

“The Beast” travels with the president.


The President's limousines are loaded aboard a US Air Force C-17 in preparation for a trip.

The president’s limousines as they are loaded aboard a US Air Force C-17.

US Secret Service

Presidential limousines are transported by military cargo aircraft, such as US Air Force C-17s, for use during the president’s travels, according to the US Secret Service.

When abroad, the presidential limousine flies the American flag and the flag of the host country.


The Beast presidential car in 2021

The US presidential state car, nicknamed “The Beast,” at Windsor Castle in the UK.

Pool/Max Mumby/Getty Images

When Biden visited the UK in June 2021, the presidential limousine flew both the American flag and the Union flag.

On Inauguration Day, Secret Service agents change the car’s license plates as a new president takes power.


Secret Service agents change license plates on the presidential limousine

Secret Service agents changed the license plates on Inauguration Day.

Alex Brandon/AP

Some presidents have used the Washington, DC, “End Taxation Without Representation” license plates, while others have removed the slogan.

On President Donald Trump’s second Inauguration Day, Secret Service agents gave “The Beast” a good shine.


A Secret Service agent shines the presidential limousine.

A Secret Service agent cleaned the presidential limousine.

Andrew Harnik/Getty Images

Biden and Trump rode to the 2025 inauguration ceremony together in the presidential limousine.

Russian President Vladimir Putin rode in “The Beast” with Trump in August.


President Donald Trump enters The Beast

Trump and Putin entered The Beast after they arrived for a meeting in Alaska.

Andrew Harnik/Getty Images

Ahead of a meeting on August 15, 2025, to discuss the war in Ukraine, Trump and Putin unexpectedly rode in the car together. The ride lasted fewer than 10 minutes and offered the leaders the opportunity to talk privately. Putin was seen smiling from within the vehicle.

Accompanied by the presidential motorcade, “The Beast” remains an instantly recognizable symbol of the power of the presidency.


The Beast.

The presidential limousine.

Andrew Harnik/Getty Images

“It is safe to say that this car’s security and coded communications systems make it the most technologically advanced protection vehicle in the world,” the assistant director for the US Secret Service’s Office of Protective Operations said in a statement on the organization’s official website.




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