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🥊 Axios PM: Trump taunts Dems

🦷 Plus: Tooth Fairy payout | Wednesday, February 25, 2026
 
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Axios PM
By Mike Allen · Feb 25, 2026

Hey there, Wednesday readers. Today's newsletter, edited by Alex Fitzpatrick, is 616 words, a 2½-min. read. Thanks to Sheryl Miller for copy editing.

🚨 Breaking: Cuban forces killed four people and wounded several others on a U.S.-registered speedboat during a shootout in Cuban waters today, Havana's Interior Ministry said. Get the latest.

⚡️ The FBI served search warrants today at the L.A. Unified School District's headquarters and the superintendent's home. Go deeper.

 
 
1 big thing: Trump taunts Dems
 
President Trump's State of the Union address last night. Photo: Kenny Holston/The New York Times

President Trump used last night's State of the Union address to portray himself as America's savior and protector, as the country marks its 250th birthday, Axios CEO Jim VandeHei says in a "Behind the Curtain" video.

🇺🇸 VandeHei says Trump "wanted to prove that he is the strong and patriotic one, and that Democrats, by contrast, are weak and weird. You saw this in the choreography from the moment he walked onto the stage until he left."

  • The president "knows that while he's unpopular, Democrats are equally unpopular. Democrats haven't done a good job of proving themselves to be an acceptable alternative to Trump."

"The most poignant moment was where he isolated on this idea of: Will you stand for U.S. citizens, or will you stand for illegal immigrants?" VandeHei added.

  • ⏱️ "He just taunted and taunted the Democrats. He let it hang in the air for what felt like minutes — because he understood that the imagery of Democrats sitting down when he's saying 'stand up if you stand for U.S. citizens' is brilliant politics."
Cover: New York Post

🇮🇷 Another moment to tuck away and think about, VandeHei says: Trump started to lay the predicate for war with Iran.

  • Trump said last night: "One thing is certain: I will never allow the world's No. 1 sponsor of terror — which they are by far — to have a nuclear weapon. Can't let that happen."

💸 Trump mostly dismissed Americans' affordability concerns, Axios' Neil Irwin and Courtenay Brown report.

  • Rather than present an I-feel-your-pain message paired with a litany of policy proposals, he argued that things are looking great.

Watch the video ... Follow Axios on YouTube.

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2. ❄️ Winters are getting shorter (Really!)
 
A U.S. map showing the change in average length of consecutive winter days from 1970-1997 to 1998-2025. 15 metro areas experienced 20 fewer days of winter, including Juneau, Alaska with 62 fewer days. Only metros experienced 20 more days: Eureka, California (50) and Monterey (46).
Data: Climate Central. (Winter temperature threshold based on the coldest 90-day window.) Map: Jacque Schrag/Axios

This winter has been brutally cold for many Americans — yet winters are getting shorter across most U.S. cities amid climate change, Alex Fitzpatrick writes from a new Climate Central report.

  • The climate research group's analysis is based on temperatures, not calendar dates.

🌡️ Compared to 1970-1997, temperature-defined winters are now shorter in 80% of the 245 major U.S. cities analyzed.

  • Winter has shortened the most in Juneau (62 days) and Anchorage (49 days), "consistent with exceptionally rapid warming in Alaska and other high-latitude locations."
  • 🌴 Among continental U.S. cities, Miami's winters have shortened the most (38 days).

Go deeper.

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A MESSAGE FROM ANTHROPIC

Claude, the AI for teachers who want to teach
 
 

Focus where it matters.

MagicSchool uses Claude, built by Anthropic, for lesson planning, IEPs, and curriculum across 13,000+ schools and districts, helping teachers spend less time on administration and more time supporting students.

They're changing how teachers work.

 
 
3. ⚡️ Catch me up
 
Team USA men's hockey players at last night's State of the Union. Photo: Andrew Caballero-Reynolds/AFP via Getty Images
  1. 🏒 Most of the gold medal-winning Team USA men's Olympic hockey players met with President Trump yesterday. Trump said the U.S. women's team, which also won gold, "will soon be coming to the White House." Go deeper.
  2. 🎓 Former Harvard president Larry Summers resigned his university positions following revelations about his closeness with Jeffrey Epstein. Go deeper.
  3. 💉 Surgeon General nominee Casey Means said during a confirmation hearing today that she believes vaccines save lives, but didn't unequivocally urge people to get vaccinated. Go deeper.
  4. 🏠 Citi announced its Blueprint for Housing Opportunity — a $60 billion, five-year housing affordability commitment to create and preserve at least 250,000 units across the U.S., including homes for essential workers. Read the announcement.
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4. 🧚 1 for the road: Top $ for fallen teeth
 
A line chart shows the average amount the Tooth Fairy paid per lost tooth from 2001-2026, according to an annual survey of parents of children 6 to 12 years old. The line is blue and is shaded transparent blue underneath, showing a range of $1.60 in 2001 up to a high of $6.23 in 2023 and back down to $5.84 in 2024, then dropping further to $5.01 in the 2025 survey. The payout was $5.84 again in 2026.
Data: Delta Dental 2026 Original Tooth Fairy Poll. Chart: Axios Visuals

The Tooth Fairy is paying an average of $5.84 per chomper this year, brushing off two years of declines, Kelly Tyko writes from Delta Dental's annual survey.

  • 💵 That's up 17% from last year ($5.01), per the survey of 1,000 parents of kids aged 6-12.

The average payout has soared from $1.30 since the survey began in 1998.

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A MESSAGE FROM ANTHROPIC

Claude, the AI for the work that finds children homes
 
 

The impact.

Every child deserves a home. Binti uses Claude, built by Anthropic, to save social workers up to 75% of time per home study visit, so they can spend more time with children and families.

Today, Binti supports 49% of children in care nationwide.

 

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