Skip to main content

The journalism you need right now

Since Donald Trump took office, the news cycle has hit a frenetic new pitch. The daily torrent of push alerts, breaking news, and viral outrages has been relentless — and exhausting. It’s hard to tell what is real and what’s just bluster. That’s why our attention is focused on helping you make sense of it all. We want to explain what truly matters and how to think about it

We rely on readers like you to fund our journalism. Will you support our work and become a Vox Member today?

Join today

Read Trump’s very large, very strange Sharpie notes on impeachment

The talking points were scrawled in all caps on an Air Force One notepad.

While Ambassador to the EU Gordon Sondland presented damning testimony before the House Intelligence Committee’s impeachment inquiry hearings on Wednesday morning, President Trump responded from the South Lawn of the White House.

“In terms of testimony with Ambassador Sondland and I just noticed one thing and that means it’s all over. ‘What do you want from Ukraine?’ he asks me, screaming,” said Trump in reference to what Sondland said during today’s hearing. “‘What do you want from Ukraine? I keep hearing all these different ideas and theories.’ ... to which I turned off the television.”

But what was really getting attention were the notes Trump brought with him:

President Trump holding a notepad covered in notes written in black ink.
President Trump holds his notes while speaking to reporters before departing from the White House on November 20, 2019.
Mark Wilson/Getty Images

The notes — handwritten in black marker on a notepad — read, “I WANT NOTHING. I WANT NOTHING. I WANT NO QUID PRO QUO. TELL ZELLINSKY TO DO THE RIGHT THING. THIS IS THE FINAL WORD FROM THE PRES OF THE U.S.”

Trump went on to continue to rebut Sondland’s testimony about their interaction, even going so far as to distance himself from the ambassador by claiming not to know him very well. The hotel owner donated $1 million to Trump’s inauguration and raised money for his 2016 campaign as well.

But Trump may need more than a few Sharpie talking points to fight the impeachment tide against him. Sondland’s testimony clearly laid out that there was a quid pro quo and that the investigations being demanded were, in his words, “important to the president.”

More in Politics

Did Trump just rein Elon in?Did Trump just rein Elon in?
Politics

The DOGE may have been leashed, for now. Check back in a week or two.

By Andrew Prokop
With Love, Meghan is bland and inoffensiveWith Love, Meghan is bland and inoffensive
Culture

She’s not an expert like Martha Stewart. She’s not an icon like Princess Diana. Where does she go from here?

By Constance Grady
Why the US has birthright citizenshipWhy the US has birthright citizenship
Play
Video

Americans don’t agree on whether being born here should make you a citizen. That’s not new.

By Adam Freelander
What Trump is trying to do to the Education Department, explainedWhat Trump is trying to do to the Education Department, explained
Policy

Between DOGE and new Secretary Linda McMahon, the department is allegedly on its “final mission.”

By Anna North
What Americans really think of Trump’s Ukraine policyWhat Americans really think of Trump’s Ukraine policy
Russia-Ukraine war

Republicans in Washington are now talking more like their voters about Ukraine.

By Nicole Narea
Seven ways of looking at Elon MuskSeven ways of looking at Elon Musk
Politics

Vox staffers share what they’ve learned that helps them understand this chaotic, mercurial man.

By Vox Staff