A photo collage with photos of Jonathan Swan and Todd Purfum with the yellow book cover of Regime Change.

July 30, 2026: NYT White House Reporter Jonathan Swan and Todd Purdum

A photo collage with photos of Jonathan Swan and Todd Purfum with the yellow book cover of Regime Change.

Writers Bloc Presents

Jonathan Swan and Todd Purdum

Thursday, July 30, 2026

7:30pm

The Ebell of Los Angeles Dining Room

741 South Lucerne Blvd. Los Angeles, CA 90005

General Admission Ticket: $25

General Admission Ticket With Book, Regime Change: $54

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It’s a common refrain among Democrats: why have efforts to stop Donald Trump’s administration of corruption and abuse of power failed time and again? And what about those Epstein Files and the surrounding scandals? 

Stellar New York Times journalists Maggie Haberman and Jonathan Swan offer answers and evidence pertaining to the president’s seemingly limitless power to upend accepted norms.  In their new book, Regime Change: Inside the Imperial Presidency of Donald Trump, Haberman and Swan focus on Trump’s first year in office from his second term.

That one year describes a whirlwind of shock and awe aimed not only at American cities and citizens, but at the global landscape as well. Justice Department payback aimed at Trump’s perceived enemies; the first family as a conduit for untold personal profit, and international aggression perpetuated in secret discussions without Congressional knowledge or consent. How did the president and his cabinet wield such power to get away with everything he’s gotten away with? With hundreds of revelatory interviews, Haberman and Swan examine Trump’s leading-by- vengeance approach, and his cavalier use of unchecked power. 

Jonathan Swan is an award-winning reporter for the New York Times, who covers the White House with Maggie Haberman. 

In conversation with Todd Purdum, former Los Angeles bureau chief for the New York Times and prior to that, he was a White House correspondent for the New York Times. As a contributing editor at Vanity Fair, he covered the busy intersection between politics and culture, and has had beats at Politico and The Atlantic. He is the author of several books, including Desi Arnaz: The Man Who Invented Television

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No refunds or exchanges on tickets or books. Books must be picked up on the night of the program. Tickets are strictly non-transferable; do not buy tickets from any resale sites or external vendors.