Donald Trump wants to act
swiftly, but 55 days after moving into the White House the president has little
to show for his hustle, hamstrung by Congress, the courts and his own
unorthodox style.
AFP
report continues:
Two
of his flagship campaign promises have yet to be fulfilled.
Judges
have blocked both versions of the billionaire tycoon's executive order to
temporarily close US borders to refugees and nationals from several
Muslim-majority nations.
Trump's
highly promoted effort to replace "Obamacare," the health coverage
law implemented under his predecessor, has lagged in Congress, where some
fellow Republicans are opposed to the new plan.
The
first two months of the Trump presidency have been a testimony to both the
constitutional limits of US executive power and the sluggish pace of on-the-job
training for the first-time politician, who has surrounded himself with
government novices.
"They
simply have fallen far behind their schedule for... the main things that they
planned to accomplished during the first few weeks," said Steven Smith, a
political science professor at Washington University in St. Louis.
The
Republican reform of health care is a case in point.
"The
Trump campaign and the Trump transition did not have a plan for replacing
Obamacare," Smith told AFP.
Complicating
matters, Trump the campaigner promised coverage for everyone, and vowed not to
touch key entitlements Medicare and Medicaid.
"All
of that simply forced the House Republicans to take more time than they
expected to get a bill prepared," the professor said.
- Accomplishments -
The
record is not without signs of progress.
"It's
been a little over 50 days since my inauguration and we've been putting our
America First agenda very much into action," Trump declared at a
campaign-style rally Wednesday in Nashville, Tennessee.
"We're
keeping our promises."
Among
his undeniable early successes is his move to change the culture in Washington
by appointing outsiders into his political circle, including several
entrepreneurs but also members of the Trump organization and his son-in-law
Jared Kushner.
The
stock market has soared into record territory, and unemployment is down.
US
President Donald Trump speaks during a rally in Nashville, Tennessee on March
15, 2017, where he said "We're keeping our promises"
|
Trump
has kept his word on several commitments: withdrawal from the Trans-Pacific
Partnership trade pact, relaunch of the Keystone XL pipeline, and freezing federal
hires.
He
has given law-enforcement broader discretion in deporting undocumented
immigrants.
The
number of arrests of people illegally crossing from Mexico into the United
States decreased by 40% from January to February compared to last year,
according to the Department of Homeland Security, which usually sees an
increase in the period.
- Slow start -
No
major Trump-backed legislation has passed Congress however, aside from a trio
of repeals of Obama-era regulations on finance, the environment and firearms.
At
this stage of his presidency, in 2009, Barack Obama had signed a massive
economic recovery bill into law in response to the financial crisis.
The
30 executive orders signed by Trump are for the most part policy signposts or
decrees that concern long term goals.
The
saga over the order to bar US entry to nationals of certain mainly Muslim
nations illustrates the improvisational nature of several early actions by the
Trump White House.
This
is attributed in part to the fact that his cabinet is still not fully in place,
due to unprecedented obstruction by opposition Democrats in the US Senate.
But
the urge to act quickly, bypassing certain institutional safeguards,
paradoxically has blurred the presidential message, especially in foreign policy.
"This
is a president whose management style is very difficult to figure," Smith
said.
"Sometimes
he jumps in and gets involved in minutiae, in sometimes unpredictable
ways," he added. "In other cases he seems to be disinterested, and
it's left to the others."
- 'Deep state' -
Trump
expended early political capital by commenting on the issue of Russian meddling
in the US election, and refuting any collusion between his associates and
Moscow.
His
repeated interventions have ruffled feathers among congressional Republicans.
Faced
with various hurdles, the president and his supporters have denounced what he
sees as partisan judges and biased media.
Trump
supporters have spoken out against a so-called "Deep State," the idea
that there is a conspiracy of bureaucrats determined to secretly manipulate or
control the presidency through the use of intelligence services and leaks to
the press.
It
is a concept that has seduced some on the far right, but experts remain
skeptical. "From my experience,
the great majority of Washington leaks come from the White House and Congress,
not from inside the intelligence community," former CIA officer John
Sipher wrote on The Cipher Brief.
No comments:
Post a Comment