On Tuesday, after much negotiation and drama over how the meeting would take place, Donald Trump sat down with a handful of New York Times journalists and editors to take their questions about his upcoming presidency. And, as they spoke, Trump proceeded to nonchalantly walk back several major promises he made during the campaign, prompting spittle-flecked headlines on Breitbart like “BROKEN PROMISES” and outrage from all corners of Trump’s Internet.

Few should be surprised that Trump, a political chameleon who was a registered Democrat in New York City before he crisscrossed America’s heartland in his Boeing 757 as a born again Republican, flip-flopping on issues ranging from the Iraq War to abortion as he went, may now be abandoning—or at least softening—some of his most extreme positions. The Muslim ban? It may or may not be happening. The Wall? A great “campaign device.” Obamacare, too, might not be so bad, Trump has said, as long as he can keep just the popular parts. Then again, it may be just as likely that Trump keeps his promises, depending on who has his ear and whatever he is feeling on any given subject at any given time. For now, here are Trump’s biggest broken promises from his big New York Times sit-down:

He Won’t Pursue a Clinton Indictment

Earlier Tuesday, Kellyanne Conway announced that Trump would no longer attempt to appoint a special prosecutor to indict Hillary Clinton over her use of a private e-mail server as secretary of state, a promise that Trump made to Clinton’s face during a debate and one that he used to whip his campaign rallies into a frenzy. Speaking to the Times, Trump confirmed Conway’s statement. “Look, 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,” said Trump, adding that Clinton “suffered greatly in many different ways.”

Asked whether his supporters would be upset by his decision, Trump replied no. “I don’t think they will be disappointed. I think I will explain it, that we have to, in many ways save our country. Because our country’s really in bad, big trouble. We have a lot of trouble. A lot of problems. And one of the big problems, I talk about, divisiveness. I think that a lot of people will appreciate . . . I’m not doing it for that reason.”

(Those supporters would beg to differ.)

Trump Admits Waterboarding Might Be Bad, Maybe

During the campaign, Trump praised waterboarding—which has been labeled as torture and is illegal under U.S. and international law—at great length. “I like it a lot,” he said at a rally in June, and said it wasn’t as “tough” as the atrocities that ISIS was committing. “So we can't do waterboarding, but they can do chopping off heads, drowning people in sealed cages . . . you have to fight fire with fire.”

By November, Trump seemed to back off the idea of going immediately to waterboarding as a form of intelligence-gathering, citing a meeting with General James Mattis, his anticipated pick for Secretary of Defense. “I met with him at length and I asked him that question. I said, what do you think of waterboarding? He said—I was surprised—he said, ‘I’ve never found it to be useful.’ He said, ‘I’ve always found, give me a pack of cigarettes and a couple of beers and I do better with that than I do with torture.’ And I was very impressed by that answer,” said Trump, who had expected him to say “‘It’s phenomenal, don’t lose it.’”