Donald Trump gave his first post-election newspaper interview to one of his least favorite publications: the New York Times, which he has called "failing" in numerous tweets but called a "great American jewel" in a wide-ranging talk with reporters and editors at the newspaper's offices Tuesday. The meeting was reinstated after being canceled earlier in the day. Some highlights from the interview, in which Trump walked back several policy positions and "displayed a jumble of impulses, many of them conflicting," according to the Times:
- Trump thinks he received "very rough" treatment from the paper. "I've been treated extremely unfairly in a sense, in a true sense," he said. "I would say the Times was about the roughest of all. You could make the case the Washington Post was bad, but every once in a while I'd actually get a good article."
- Prosecuting Hillary Clinton is not on his to-do list. Asked about reports that he has decided against appointing a special prosecutor to investigate Clinton, Trump said: "I want to move forward, I don't want to move back. And I don't want to hurt the Clintons. I really don't." He added: "She went through a lot. And suffered greatly in many different ways."
- He is "awed" by the job of being president but still feels "comfortable." "It is a very overwhelming job, but I'm not overwhelmed by it," he said.