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First 100 days of Donald Trump's presidency

The first 100 days of Donald Trump's presidency began on January 20, 2017, the day Donald Trump was inaugurated as the 45th president of the United States. The first 100 days of a presidential term took on symbolic significance during Franklin D. Roosevelt's first term in office, and the period is considered a benchmark to measure the early success of a president. The 100th day of his presidency ended at noon on April 30, 2017.[1]

Donald Trump outlines his plan for the first 100 days of his presidency on November 21, 2016.

Institutionally, President Trump had the advantage of a Republican Party majority in the U.S. House of Representatives and the Senate, but was unable to fulfill his major pledges in his first 100 days, with some approval rating polls reporting around 40%.

He reversed his position on a number of issues including labeling China as a currency manipulator,[2][3] NATO, launching the 2017 Shayrat missile strike, renomination of Janet Yellen as Chair of the Federal Reserve,[2][3] and the nomination of Export-Import Bank directors. Trump's approval among his base was high, with 96% of those who voted for him saying in an April 2017 poll that they would vote for him again.[4]

Near the end of the 100 days, the Trump administration introduced a broad outline of a sweeping tax reform focusing on deep tax cuts. Although Trump had to concede to delay funding for the U.S.–Mexico border wall he had promised, narrowly avoiding a government shutdown a few days before the end of the first 100 days.[5][6]

Trump signed 24 executive orders in his first 100 days.[7] He signed 22 presidential memoranda, 20 presidential proclamations, and 28 bills.[8] About a dozen of those bills roll-back regulations finalized during the last months of his immediate predecessor Barack Obama's presidency using the Congressional Review Act.[9][10][11] Most of the other bills are "small-scale measures that appoint personnel, name federal facilities or modify existing programs."[12] None of Trump's bills are considered to be "major bills"—based on a "longstanding political-science standard for 'major bills'".[8] Presidential historian Michael Beschloss said that "based on a legislative standard"—which is what the first 100 days has been judged on since the tenure of President Franklin D. Roosevelt, who enacted 76 laws in 100 days including nine that were "major".[7][13][14][15]

Pledges edit

Trump pledged to do the following in his first 100 days:[16][17][18]

  • Appoint judges "who will uphold the Constitution" and "defend the Second Amendment"
  • Construct a wall on the southern U.S. border and limit illegal immigration "to give unemployed Americans an opportunity to fill good-paying jobs"
  • Re-assess trade agreements with other nations and "crack down" on companies that send jobs overseas
 
The Affordable Care Act or Obamacare

Inauguration edit

The first 100 days of the Presidency of Donald Trump began during the inauguration of Donald Trump with the conversion of Whitehouse.gov from the Obama Administration version to the Trump Administration version at 12:00 pm on January 20, 2017. This was the third presidential online portal transition and the first to transition social media accounts such as Twitter.[27] As Trump took the oath of office, the official @POTUS Twitter account switched to President Trump with Barack Obama's previous tweets archived under @POTUS44.[28]

Administration and Cabinet edit

On February 8, when Trump formally announced his 24-member-cabinet—the largest cabinet of any President so far—fewer cabinet nominees had been confirmed than any other president except George Washington by the same length of time into his presidency.[29][30][31] Trump's reorganization of the cabinet removed the Chair of the Council of Economic Advisers that President Obama had added in 2009. The Director of National Intelligence and Director of the CIA were elevated to cabinet-level.[32] During the transition period, Trump had named a full slate of Cabinet and Cabinet-level nominees, all of which require Senate confirmation except for White House Chief of Staff and the vice presidency.[33]

By April 29, almost all of his nominated cabinet members had been confirmed, including Secretaries of State Rex Tillerson, Treasury Steven Mnuchin, Defense James Mattis, Justice Jeff Sessions, the Interior Ryan Zinke, Secretary of Agriculture Sonny Perdue, Commerce Wilbur Ross, Secretary of Labor Alex Acosta, Health and Human Services HHS Tom Price, Housing and Urban Development HUD Ben Carson, Transportation Elaine Chao, Energy Rick Perry, Education Betsy DeVos, Veterans Affairs David Shulkin, Homeland Security John Kelly, Director of the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) Mike Pompeo, UN Ambassador Nikki R. Haley, Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) Scott Pruitt, Small Business Administration Linda McMahon, Management and Budget OMB Mick Mulvaney, and Director of National Intelligence Dan Coats. Only two were awaiting confirmation—Trade Representative Robert Lighthizer and Council of Economic Advisers CEA Kevin Hassett.[34]

James Mattis was confirmed on January 20 as Secretary of Defense by a vote of 98–1. Mattis had previously received a waiver of the National Security Act of 1947, which requires a seven-year waiting period before retired military personnel can assume the role of Secretary of Defense.[35] John Kelly was confirmed as United States Secretary of Homeland Security on the first day by a vote of 88–11.[36] Former ExxonMobil CEO Rex Tillerson was sworn in as Secretary of State by Vice-President Mike Pence on February 1.[37][38] Trump nominated Tillerson for the position as top U.S. diplomat (the equivalent of a foreign minister) on December 13, 2016.[39] He was approved by the Senate Foreign Relations Committee on January 23, 2017,[40] and by the full Senate in a 56–43 vote.[37][38] Nikki Haley was confirmed as UN Ambassador with a Senate vote of 96 to 4.[41]

On January 26, 2017, when Tillerson visited the United States State Department, Undersecretaries Joyce Anne Barr, Patrick F. Kennedy, Michele Bond, and Gentry O. Smith all simultaneously resigned from the department. Former State Department chief of staff David Wade called the resignations "the single biggest simultaneous departure of institutional memory that anyone can remember."[42] The Trump administration told CNN the officials had been fired[43] and the Chicago Tribune reported that several senior state department career diplomats left the State Department, claiming they "had been willing to remain at their posts but had no expectation of staying."[44]

On February 10, Tom Price was confirmed as Secretary of Health and Human Services (HHS), a "$1 trillion government department".[45] HHS includes National Institutes of Health (NIH), the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, and the Food and Drug Administration (FDA). Price, who is a vocal opponent of the Affordable Care Act, will oversee its repeal and replacement.[45] He has published articles in the "small, conservative medical association", the Association of American Physicians and Surgeons, to which he belongs, that opposes mandatory vaccination and continue to argue that the vaccines causes autism,[46] a "discredited conspiracy theory that Trump has long espoused". In response to questions from Senators at the hearing as to whether he believes autism is caused by vaccines, he responded, "I think the science in that instance is that it does not".[47]

Steve Mnuchin, who was nominated by Trump in November 2016,[48][49] was finally confirmed on February 13, 2017, as Secretary of the Treasury department[50] after lengthy confirmation hearings.[51][52][53][54]

On February 16, the Senate voted 54 to 46 to advance Scott Pruitt's nomination as Administrator of the Environmental Protection Agency.[55] On February 16, a District Court Judge in Oklahoma, Aletia Timmons, ordered Pruitt to "turn over thousands of emails related to his communication with the oil, gas and coal industry" in a case brought to court by the Center for Media and Democracy.[56] Lawmakers had criticized Pruitt who sued the EPA 14 times on behalf of the State of Oklahoma.[55]

Trump nominated Alexander Acosta as Secretary of Labor on February 16, when his first nominee Andrew Puzder stepped down[57] under a wave of criticism for having employed an illegal immigrant as a former housekeeper, for his "remarks on women and employees at his restaurants" and for his "rancorous 1980s divorce".[58][59]

Notable non-Cabinet positions edit

According to a database compiled by The Washington Post in collaboration with the Partnership for Public Service, as of April 27, 473 of the 554 key executive branch nominations that require Presidential nomination and Senate confirmation, had not yet been appointed, including "Cabinet secretaries, deputy and assistant secretaries, chief financial officers, general counsel, heads of agencies, ambassadors and other critical leadership positions."[60] Only three of the 119 Department of State executive branch positions have been filled and only one position in the Department of Defense—the Secretary of Defense, James Mattis—has been filled out of 53 key positions. Trump has not yet nominated anyone for 49 of these positions.[61][62] On February 28, in an exclusive interview Tuesday with Fox & Friends, said, "a lot of those jobs, I don't want to appoint, because they're unnecessary to have. ... You know, we have so many people in government, even me. I look at some of the jobs and it's people over people over people. I say, 'What do all these people do?' You don't need all those jobs ... Many of those jobs I don't want to fill. I say, isn't that a good thing? That's not a bad thing. That's a good thing. We're running a very good, efficient government."[63]

Prior to taking office, Trump named several important White House advisers to positions that do not require Senate confirmation, including Stephen K. Bannon as his "senior counselor and chief West Wing strategist" and Reince Priebus as Chief of Staff, with a mission "as equal partners to transform the federal government."[64] Other important advisers outside of the Cabinet include (Counselor to the President) Kellyanne Conway, Senior Advisor (National Security Advisor) Michael Flynn (replaced by H. R. McMaster) and (National Trade Council) Director Peter Navarro.[65] (Homeland Security Adviser) Thomas P. Bossert, (Regulatory Czar) Carl Icahn, (White House Counsel) Donald F. "Don" McGahn II, and (Press Secretary) Sean Spicer.

Michael T. Flynn served as Trump's National Security Advisor from January 20 until his resignation on February 13, 2017.[66][67] He set a record for the shortest tenure as National Security Advisor in American history.[68] The Justice Department warned the Trump administration that Flynn, who had a "well-established history with Russia",[69] may have been "vulnerable to blackmail by Moscow". Flynn had "mischaracterized his communications" with Russian Ambassador Sergey Kislyak to Vice President Mike Pence regarding U.S. sanctions on Russia.[68][69] Flynn's phone calls had been "recorded by a government wiretap" and several days after Flynn was named as Trump's Advisor, Sally Yates, who was then acting attorney general, warned the White House that "Flynn was susceptible to blackmail by the Russians because he had misled Mr. Pence and other officials". According to a February 14 article by The New York Times, it was unclear why the White House did not react to Yates' warning in early January. There were also questions about how much was known in early January by Bannon, Pence, Spicer, and Trump. Yates was fired on January 30, in an unrelated incident.[69][70][71]

On February 20, 2017, Trump named "warrior-scholar deemed an expert in counter insurgency",[72] Lieutenant General H. R. McMaster, to replace Flynn as National Security Advisor.[73][74][75] Trump overruled McMaster's attempt to replace 30-year-old NSC aide Ezra Cohen-Watnick, a Mike Flynn appointee, with Linda Weissgold, when Bannon and Kushner intervened on Cohen-Watnick's behalf on March 11–12.[76][77] Cohen-Watnick gathered classified files on intelligence information on U.S. persons.[77]

On January 28, 2017, Trump signed a Memorandum, the Organization of the National Security Council and the Homeland Security Council[78] which restructured the Principals Committee—the senior policy committee—of the National Security Council, assigning a permanent invitation to Steve Bannon, White House Chief Strategist, while at the same time withdrawing the permanent invitations of the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff and Director of National Intelligence.[79] On April 5, the 75th day of Trump's presidency, under guidance from Army Lieutenant General H. R. McMaster, the National Security Advisor (NSC advisor) who replaced Mike Flynn, Trump removed Bannon, who has no security experience, from the National Security Council's principals committee.[80][81]

Trump's 36-year-old son-in-law, Jared Kushner is Trump's Senior Advisor alongside Stephen Miller. "In his January interview with the Times of London, Trump said that Kushner would be in charge of brokering peace in the Israeli–Palestinian conflict.[82][83][84] He is also a "top adviser on relations with Canada, China and Mexico".[85] On April 3, Kushner accompanied the head of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, General Joseph F. Dunford Jr. and Homeland Security Advisor Thomas P. Bossert to meet with Iraqi Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi "to discuss the fight against the Islamic State and whether the United States would leave troops in Iraq afterward."[85][86] Trump named Kushner as head of the White House Office of American Innovation, (OAI), established on March 29 and mandated to use ideas from the private-sector to overhaul all federal agencies and departments in order to "spur job creation".[87][88][89] One of the OAI's first priorities is to modernize the technology of departments such as Veterans Affairs.[90] In his new position, Kushner will work with Chris Christie, who will chair the newly established "President's Commission on Combating Drug Addiction and the Opioid Crisis" in response to Trump's pledge to combat opioid abuse.[90][91][92]

On January 28, in his eleventh Presidential Memoranda, "Organization of the National Security Council and the Homeland Security Council", White House Chief Strategist, Steve Bannon, was designated as a regular attendee to the National Security Council (NSC)′s Principals Committee, a Cabinet-level senior interagency forum for considering national security issues, in a departure from the previous format in which this role is usually held for generals.[93][94][95] While at first there was some confusion over meeting attendees, Priebus clarified on January 30, that defense officials could attend the meetings.[96][97] On April 5, the 75th day of Trump's presidency, under guidance from Army Lieutenant General H. R. McMaster, the National Security Advisor (NSC advisor) who replaced Mike Flynn, Trump removed Bannon, who has no security experience, from the National Security Council's principals committee.[80][81]

On February 2, Time published an article about Bannon as potentially, the second most powerful man in the world, illustrated with a cover labeling him as the "Great Manipulator".[98][99] After only a fortnight into Trump's presidency, NPR described Bannon as "the power behind the throne" and the "gray eminence behind much of what Trump was prioritizing", rivalling Kushner's and Priebus' roles.[100] Mike Pence affirmed in a PBS NewsHour report that only Trump was "in charge".

Bannon and Steve Miller have been called the "architects" of the inaugural address, executive orders, including the controversial travel and refugees EO,[101] and presidential memoranda.[100][101]

In an often-cited October 8, 2015, lengthy profile entitled "This Man Is the Most Dangerous Political Operative in America" by Joshua Green, a senior national correspondent for Bloomberg News, Green described how Breitbart News with Bannon at its helm, had "championed Trump's presidential candidacy" and helped "coalesce a splinter faction of conservatives" who were irate over the way in which Fox News had treated Trump.[102] Green quoted then-Senator Jeff Sessions as an admirer of Breitbart, which was "extraordinarily influential", with many radio hosts "reading Breitbart every day".[102] Trump cited Breitbart News to vindicate his claims.[103]

Stephen Miller, Trump's Senior Advisor, was Jeff Sessions' communications director when he served as Senator for Alabama.[104][105][106] Thirty-one-year old Miller, Bannon, and Andrew Bremberg sent over 200 executive orders to federal agencies for review before January 20.[107] Miller has been an architect behind the inaugural address and the most "contentious executive orders"[107] including Executive Order 13769.[108][109]

In a February 12 interview with ABC News anchor George Stephanopoulos, when asked to provide evidence "for Trump's "unfounded allegations"[110] where former Senator Kelly Ayotte lost her bid for election, and Trump narrowly lost to Clinton in 2016,[111][112] Miller suggested Stephanopoulos interview Kansas Senator, Kris Kobach, who relied upon a 2012 Pew Research Center study[113] in his voter fraud claims.[110][114] The day before the interview a Federal Election Commission Commissioner called on Trump to provide evidence of what would "constitute thousands of felony criminal offenses under New Hampshire law."[112]

Gary Cohn, the former Goldman Sachs investment banker and executive, took office on January 20, as Trump's Director of the National Economic Council, (NEC), a position which did not require Congressional confirmation,[52][115] By February 11, 2017, The Wall Street Journal described Cohn as an "economic-policy powerhouse" in Trump's administration and The New York Times called him Trump's "go-to figure on matters related to jobs, business and growth."[116] While the confirmation of Trump's December 12, 2016, nominee for Secretary of Treasury, Steven Mnuchin, was delayed until February 13 by Congressional hearings, Cohn filled in the "personnel vacuum" and pushed "ahead on taxes, infrastructure, financial regulation and replacing health-care law."[51][52] In November, Trump considered offering Cohn the position as Secretary of Treasury.[52] If Cohn had stayed at Goldman Sachs, some believed he would have become CEO when Lloyd Blankfein vacated that office and his $285 million severance package "raised eyebrows" according to CNN.[52][117] Bannon and Cohn disagree on the border-adjustment tax,[118] the centerpiece of Paul Ryan's controversial tax reforms presented on February 17,[119][120] which includes a 20% import tax, export subsidies and a 15% reduction in corporate tax rates that would, among other things, pay for the Mexican wall,[121] which according to a The Washington Post study, would cost $25 billion[122] and which Trump stated would cost $12 billion.[123]

Domestic policy edit

United States Domestic Policy Council edit

The Domestic Policy Council (DPC) consists of Trump and Andrew Bremberg as Directors with Paul Winfree as Deputy Assistant. Council attendees include Mike Pence, Jeff Sessions, Tom Price, John F. Kelly, David Shulkin, Ryan Zinke, Betsy DeVos, Ben Carson, Elaine Chao, Wilbur Ross, Rick Perry, Steven Mnuchin, and—when appointed—the Secretary of Labor and the Secretary of Agriculture. Additional attendees include Scott Pruitt, Mick Mulvaney (Director of the Office of Management and Budget), Gary Cohn, and—when appointed—the Chair of the Council of Economic Advisers and the Director of the Office of National Drug Control Policy.[124] The Congressional Research Service describes DPC's role as analyses of domestic policies and social programs including "education, labor and worker safety; health-care insurance and financing; health services and research; aging policy studies; Social Security, pensions and disability insurance; immigration, homeland security, domestic intelligence and criminal justice; and welfare, nutrition and housing programs."

Withdrawal of the Affordable Care Act edit

Within the first hours of Trump's presidency, he signed his first executive order, Minimizing the Economic Burden of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act Pending Repeal (EO 13765) to fulfill part of his pledge to repeal the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (ACA),[125] which was part of a series of steps taken prior to 2017 to repeal and defund the ACA,[126] including most recently, the FY2017 budget resolution, S.Con.Res. 3, that contained language allowing the repeal of ACA through the budget reconciliation process.[127][128] A CBO report estimated 18 million people would lose their insurance and premiums would rise by 20% to 25% in the first year after repealing Obamacare. Uninsured could reach 32 million by 2026, while premiums could double.[129] The order states what Mr. Trump made clear during his campaign: that it is his administration's policy to seek the "prompt repeal" of Obamacare.[130] During his Fox News interview with Bill O'Reilly airing before the Super Bowl, Trump announced that the timeline for replacing Obamacare had to be extended and that a replacement would probably not be ready until 2018. Republicans are limited as to how much of ACA they can undo as they do not have a 60-vote majority in the Senate. They also "must balance the interests of insurers and medical providers".[131] According to the March 13, 2017, report by the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office and staff of the Joint Committee on Taxation (JCT) on the budgetary impact of the Republican bill to repeal and replace ACA over the coming decade, there would be a $337 billion reduction in the federal deficit and an estimated loss of coverage to 24 million more Americans.[132][133][134] The Republican health-care plan was unveiled on March 6 and faced opposition from both moderate and conservative Republicans, such as the House Freedom Caucus.[135][136] The American Health Care Act of 2017 (AHCA), a bill to repeal and replace the ACA, was withdrawn in Congress on March 24, 2017, due to lack of support from within the Republican caucus.[135][136][137]

Immigration policy edit

In his first 100 days, President Trump signed executive orders to set in motion travel bans and restrictions on refugees and immigrants from Muslim-majority countries, increased immigration enforcement including deportations, and expanded efforts to prevent illegal entry into the United States by building a wall along the Mexico–United States border. While the numbers of people deported were very similar to those in 2016, the categories of people targeted for deportations was broadened during this period, which meant that many more people are at a heightened risk of deportation. Secretary Kelly clarified that Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) "will no longer exempt classes or categories of removable aliens from potential enforcement." By April 3, according to ICE, there had been 35,604 removals in January and February 2017 compared to 35,255 in the same period in 2016. But the "tough rhetoric" and some "high-profile Ice operations" widely cited in the media resulted in widespread fear and panic within immigrant communities.[138]

In an AP April 20 interview, Trump said that, "The dreamers should rest easy".[139] There are 800,000 young people protected by Obama's "Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals" (DREAMERS) who came to the U.S. as children and are living there illegally. Some of these "dreamers" in interviews with The Associated Press on April 21, said they "were not comforted by Trump's pledge" particularly since the April 18 deportation of 23-year-old "dreamer", Juan Manuel Montes.[140] Trump supporters who are "immigration hard-liners", such as NumbersUSA and Mark Krikorian of the Center for Immigration Studies, feel deceived by Trump's softening stance on DREAMERs arguing that "[h]is promise on DACA was pretty clear and unequivocal".[141]

Travel ban and refugee suspension edit

 
Map of countries affected by Executive Order 13769. Collectively, the order applies to over 200 million people (approximate population of the seven countries) while about 90,000 people from these countries currently hold a US immigrant or non-immigrant visa.[142][143]

On January 27, at 4:42 p.m EST, Trump signed Executive Order 13769,[144] entitled "Protecting the Nation From Terrorist Attacks by Foreign Nationals" which temporarily suspends the U. S. Refugee Admissions Program (USRAP) for 120 days and denies entry to citizens of Iraq, Iran, Libya, Somalia, Sudan, Syria and Yemen for 90 days. The suspension for Syrian refugees is for an indefinite period of time.[145][146] The Economist described the order as "drafted in secret, enacted in haste and unlikely to fulfill its declared aim of sparing America from terrorism" with "Republican allies" lamenting that a "fine, popular policy was marred by its execution."[147] Notably Saudi Arabia was not on the list though most of the 9/11 hijackers were from there.[148] See Provisions of Order 13769.

On February 4, the U.S. Department of Homeland Security and the State Department suspended all actions to implement the week-old EO[149] in response to the February 3 ruling by federal judge James Robart which blocked the EO.[149][150][151] According to CNN and the Los Angeles Times, the architects behind the order, were Stephen Miller and Steve Bannon.[109][152] White House officials deny that it was written without input from the U.S. Department of Justice's Office of Legal Counsel (OLC).[153] It was argued that these seven countries ranked among the lowest 15 of the 104 countries evaluated by the Henley & Partners Visa Restrictions Index in 2016 based on the "number of countries that their citizens can travel to visa-free". For example, Germany ranks the highest at 177 points, Afghanistan the lowest of all 104 at 25.[154]: 3  The order also calls for an expedited completion and implementation of the Biometric Entry-Exit Tracking System for all travelers coming into the United States.[145][155] The first legal challenge against the EO was filed on January 28, and within two days there were dozens of ongoing lawsuits in the United States federal courts.[156] By February 3, federal judge, James Robart temporarily blocked the week-old EO which opened American airports to visa holders from the seven targeted countries.[150][151] At the international level legal concerns have been raised by the UN, Zeid Ra'ad al Hussein, who claimed that "discrimination on nationality alone is forbidden under human rights law."[157][158] On January 30, in a telephone call to Trump, German Chancellor Angela Merkel explained that his EO "ran counter to the duties of all signatory states" to the Geneva Refugee Convention "to take in war refugees on humanitarian grounds".[159]

Thousands protested at airports and other locations throughout the United States.[160] Critics of the ban include most Democrats and several top Republican Congressmen,[161] former President Obama,[162] the Council on American–Islamic Relations,[163] over a dozen state attorneys general,[164] thousands of academics,[165] Nobel laureates,[165][166] technology companies,[167] Iran, France, Germany,[168][169] and 800,000 petitioners in Britain.[170] Supporters of the ban include 82% of GOP voters,[171][172] Paul Ryan, Bob Goodlatte, Czech President Miloš Zeman,[169][173] and members of the European far right.[174][175] According to an IPSOS online poll conducted on January 31, in response to the question, "Do you agree or disagree with the Executive Order that President Trump signed blocking refugees and banning people from seven Muslim majority countries from entering the U.S.?", 48% of the 1,201 Americans polled agreed with the statement (23% of the 453 Democrats, 82% of the 478 Republicans, and 44% of the Independents polled).[171]

On the evening of January 30, Trump replaced acting Attorney General Sally Yates with Dana Boente.[176] Spicer's statement described Yates as an "Obama administration appointee" who had "betrayed the Department of Justice" by "refusing to enforce a legal order". In the Senate, Chuck Schumer, called her firing a Monday Night Massacre in reference to Nixon's firing of his attorney general, referred to as the Saturday Night Massacre during Watergate.[177] Trump also replaced DHS's ICE Chief Daniel Ragsdale with Thomas Homan as Acting Director in the evening of January 30.[178][179]

In a live interview with Chris Wallace on January 29, Fox News Sunday, Kellyanne Conway, justified the list of seven countries by claiming that the countries were originally identified as a threat in the Terrorist Prevention Act passed by Congress in 2015.[180] HUD's Visa Waiver Program Improvement and Terrorist Travel Prevention Act of 2015, was extended amid some controversy in February 2016, when it revoked the privilege of traveling to the States without a visa to people who "had recently traveled to Iraq, Syria, Iran or Sudan", as they were considered high-risk.[181][182] A spokesman for former president Obama issued a statement stating, "The president [Obama] fundamentally disagrees with the notion of discriminating against individuals because of their faith or religion." In his final press statement as president, Obama said, "There's a difference between [the] normal functioning of politics and certain issues or certain moments where I think our core values may be at stake," and stated his intention to speak out if a situation is serious enough.[162] Obama encouraged Americans to protest the issue.[183]

In response to a temporary restraining order (TRO) issued in the case of State of Washington v. Trump, the Department of Homeland Security said on February 4 that it had stopped enforcing the portions of the executive order affected by the judgment, while the State Department activated visas that had been previously suspended. The restraining order was upheld by the United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit on February 9, 2017.[184]

On March 15, a United States Federal Judge, Derrick Watson of the District Court of Hawaii, issued a 43-page ruling which blocked Trump's revised March 6 executive order 13780 on the grounds that it violated the First Amendment's Establishment Clause by disfavoring a particular religion.[185] The temporary restraining order was converted to a preliminary injunction by Judge Watson on March 29.[186] On an April 18 airing of the Mark Levin Show Jeff Sessions commented, "We are confident that the President will prevail on appeal and particularly in the Supreme Court, if not the Ninth Circuit. So this is a huge matter. I really am amazed that a judge sitting on an island in the Pacific can issue an order that stops the President of the United States from what appears to be clearly his statutory and Constitutional power."[187]

High-profile ICE operations edit

On February 8, 2017, Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents arrested 35-year-old Guadalupe García de Rayos, when she attended her required annual review at the ICE office in Phoenix, and deported her to Mexico on the next day based on a removal order issued in 2013 by the Executive Office for Immigration Review.[188][189] Immigrant advocates believe that she is the first[190][191] to be deported after the EO was signed and that her deportation "reflects the severity" of the "crackdown" on illegal immigration.[192] ICE officials said that her case went through multiple reviews in the immigration court system and that the "judges held she did not have a legal basis to remain in the US".[193] In 2008, she was working at an amusement park in Mesa, Arizona when then-Sheriff Joe Arpaio ordered a raid that resulted in her arrest and felony identity theft conviction for possessing a false Social Security number. Arpaio was a subject of several controversies during his tenure as sheriff. In 2015, the U.S. Department of Justice partially settled a lawsuit filed against Arpaio for unlawful discriminatory police conduct, alleging that Arpaio had overseen the worst pattern of racial profiling in U.S. history.[194][195] ICE officials in Los Angeles released a report on February 10, 2017, that about 160 foreign nationals were arrested in a five-day operation. Of those, 150 had criminal histories, and of the remaining arrests, five had final orders of removal or were previously deported. Ninety-five percent were male.[196] Under Trump's EO, the definition of criminal is much more "sweeping" than Obama's, which "prioritized expulsion of undocumented immigrants who threatened public safety or national security, had ties to criminal gang activity, committed serious felony offenses or were habitual misdemeanor criminal offenders" and a single immigration officer decides.[193] On the morning of February 14, ICE officials entered the Des Moines, Washington family home of 23-year-old Daniel Ramirez Medina on an arrest warrant for Ramirez' father, who was taken into custody.[197] Ramirez, who has no criminal record, entered the United States illegally as a child, and was later able to get a legal work permit through the 2012 Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) policy, was placed in detention in the Northwest Detention Center,[197] Tacoma, Washington. According to ICE, Ramirez was detained based on "his admitted gang affiliation and risk to public safety".[197] According to Ramirez's lawyer, Ramirez "unequivocally denies" these allegations and claimed ICE agents "repeatedly pressured" Ramirez to "falsely admit" gang affiliation.[197][198] "The case raises questions about what it could mean for Dreamers, undocumented immigrants who were brought to the United States as children."[197]

U.S.–Mexico border wall proposal edit

 
President Trump signs an executive order at a ceremony at DHS headquarters.

While visiting the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) on January 25, President Trump signed his third executive order Border Security and Immigration Enforcement Improvements (EO 13767)[199][200] under the (INA), the Secure Fence Act, and the (IIRIRA) for the construction of a Mexican border wall[201] to deter illegal migration and smuggling of illegal products.[202] The existing Mexico–United States barrier is not one continuous structure, but a series of physical walls and physical and "virtual" fences monitored by the United States Border Patrol.[201][203] The proposed wall which would be "a contiguous, physical wall or other similarly secure, contiguous, and impassable physical barrier"[200] along the entire length of the border, which Trump estimated in 2016 would cost $10 billion to $12 billion,[204] and by January 27 was estimated to be $20 billion,[205] to be initially paid by Congress. Trump plans on eventually negotiating a reimbursement from the Mexican government.[202] While the Executive Order entitled "Border Security and Immigration Enforcement Improvements", contains no information of payment, it requests federal agency reports by late March 2017 which "identify and quantify all sources of direct and indirect Federal aid or assistance to the Government of Mexico on an annual basis over the past five years, including all bilateral and multilateral development aid, economic assistance, humanitarian aid, and military aid."[200]

On January 27, Forbes cautioned that the 20% Mexican Import Tariff on all imported goods announced by Spicer to pay for the 1,933-mile (3,111 km) frontier wall would be "paid by Americans".[205] GOP donors, Brothers Charles and David Koch, and their advocacy group, Americans For Prosperity, oppose Paul Ryan's 'Buy American' Tax Plan, which they claim would add a "whopping tax hike of more than $1 trillion on American families and small businesses over 10 years." The import tariff would raise prices at Wal-Mart, for example, directly impacting lower income families.[206]

The Washington Post reported on April 25, that Trump had agreed to delaying funding for the construction of the wall until September to avoid a government shutdown.[5]

Sanctuary cities edit

On January 25, Trump signed an executive order, "Enhancing Public Safety in the Interior of the United States", to the Secretary of Homeland Security and the Attorney General and their departments and agencies to increase the enforcement of immigration laws[207] which included the hiring of 10,000 "additional immigration officers". His order requires the cooperation of state and local authorities. The order states "sanctuary jurisdictions" including "sanctuary cities" who refuse to comply will not be "eligible to receive Federal grants, except as deemed necessary for law enforcement purposes by the Attorney General or the Secretary".[207] Some officials claim that the "U.S. Constitution bars the federal government from commandeering state officials or using federal funds to 'coerce' states into doing the bidding of Washington."[208] Mayors of New York, Boston, Denver, Los Angeles, San Francisco, and Seattle have expressed concerns about the Order and do not want to "change the way their cities treat immigrants".[209][210] Jeff Sessions is considered to be an "inspiration" for Trump's anti-immigration policies.[211] On August 31, 2016, Trump laid out a 10-step plan as part of his immigration policy where he reiterated that all illegal immigrants are "subject to deportation" with priority given to illegal immigrants who have committed significant crimes and those who have overstayed visas. He noted that all those seeking legalization would have to go home and re-enter the country legally.[212][213][214][215][216] In a meeting with concerned mayors, Sessions explained that the Executive Order merely directs cities to enforce the preexisting thirty-year-old law, 8 U.S.C. 1373 which means that "there is no sanctuary city debate."[217] On April 25, U.S. District Judge William Orrick III sided with San Francisco and Santa Clara in their lawsuit against the Trump administration, issuing a temporary injunction effectively blocking the order targeting so-called sanctuary cities. Justice Orrick said that the president "has no authority to attach new conditions to federal spending".[218] Judge Orrick issued a nationwide permanent injunction on November 20, 2017, declaring that section 9(a) of Executive Order 13768 was "unconstitutional on its face"[219][220] and violates "the separation of powers doctrine and deprives [the plaintiffs] of their Tenth and Fifth Amendment rights."[221]

Social policy edit

Trump's appointment of a conservative justice, Neil Gorsuch, his reinstatement of the Mexico City Policy, and his signing H.J. Res. 43—HHS Title X Funding for Planned Parenthood Rule[10] are in keeping with his pro-life policy.[222] On January 23, Trump signed a Presidential Memorandum on the Mexico City Policy regarding federal funding to foreign NGOs.[223][224][225] This is a key point in the abortion debate as foreign NGOs that receive US federal funding will no longer be able to offer, promote or perform abortion services as part of family planning in their own countries using non-U.S. government funds.[226][227] Forbes claimed this could "potentially affect $9.5 billion" in programs that reach "225 million women globally".[228]

On April 13, Trump quietly signed H.J. Res. 43—HHS Title X Funding for Planned Parenthood Rule—[10] reversing Obama's December 2016 regulation which had mandated that Title X recipients—like states local and state governments—distribute federal funds for services related to contraception, sexually transmitted infections, fertility, pregnancy care, and breast and cervical cancer screening to qualified health providers, regardless of whether they also perform abortions".[229] Bloomberg noted that although this was "one of the few opportunities" Trump has had in his first 100 days to enact legislation, he signed this bill in private.[230] The Obama rule never came into effect as it was blocked by a federal judge.[231] Republicans want to cut off federal funding from health-care organizations such as Planned Parenthood that perform abortions. Proponents of the bill claim it supports states' rights over federalist rights.[230] The bill was passed under the procedures of the Congressional Review Act. In the Senate Vice-President Pence cast a tie-breaking vote.[11][232] This will be an issue at the end of the first 100 days as Congress tries to avoid a government shutdown.[230] In Fiscal Year 2014, Planned Parenthood clinics received $20.5 million of the $252.6 million distributed under the Title X Family Planning grant program.[230]

The proposed American Health Care Act, announced by Congressional Republicans in March 2017, would have made Planned Parenthood "ineligible for Medicaid reimbursements or federal family planning grants".[233]

Suspended reduction of Federal Housing Mortgage Insurance Premium rates edit

Within the first hours of Trump's presidency, he "suspended indefinitely" the reduced "Mortgage Insurance Premiums for loans with Closing/Disbursement date on or after January 27, 2017", known as the Federal Housing Administration's (FHA) Annual Mortgage Insurance Premium (MIP) Rates managed under the United States Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD). It is "effective immediately".[125][234] Obama's rate cut would have lowered borrowing costs for first time and low income house buyers.[235]

Gun control edit

In February 2017, the Trump administration signed into law a bill that rolled back a regulation implemented by the Obama administration,[236] which would have prohibited approximately 75,000 individuals who were receiving Social Security disability and had representative payees, from owning guns.[237][238][239] The bill was supported by the ACLU,[240] the National Association for Mental Health, The American Association of People with Disabilities, and the National Council on Disability,[241] the Consortium for Citizens with Disabilities,[242] as well as other disability rights advocates.[243] The initial regulation was supported by the Brady Campaign to Stop Gun Violence,[244] Moms Demand Action Against Gun Violence,[245] Democratic gun control advocates,[246] and some mental health experts.[245]

High-priority infrastructure edit

On January 24, Trump signed his second Executive Order entitled Expediting Environmental Reviews and Approvals for High Priority Infrastructure Projects[247] (EO 13766)[248][249][250] which is part of a series of five executive orders to date.[251] This Order was part of a series "designed to speed environmental permitting and reviews" as " major infrastructure projects trigger an array of overlapping environmental and natural resource laws and requirements".[249]

On April 19, Trump signed a bill that extended the VA's Choice beyond August. The 2014 Veterans' Access to Care through Choice, Accountability, and Transparency Act was enacted in by the Obama administration in response to the Veterans Health Administration scandal of 2014.[252]

Foreign policy edit

The main group advising the President on foreign affairs and national security is the National Security Council (NSC)[253] which coordinates national agencies such as the secretaries of defense and state; the secretaries of the army, navy, and air force.

On April 10, The Wall Street Journal described Trump's foreign policy as moving away from the "America First", "isolationist" policies towards more "mainstream" and "conventional" tendencies under the more stabilizing influence of Tillerson, Mattis, McMaster, Ross, and Kushner.[254]

On the first day of Trump's presidency, the White House website had posted a 220-word description of its foreign policy. It was protectionist with a focus on "America First", as was his inaugural address. His three top priorities were to defeat ISIS, to rebuild the military, and to embrace diplomacy.[255]

Defense edit

At the time Trump took office, U.S. military spending had reached its highest peak ever.[255] Trump requested $30 billion for FY 2017 which ends in September, and an increase of $54 billion to Defense Department for FY 2018. The $639 billion in FY2018 would result in deep cuts to many other departments including the State Department, the diplomatic arm of the administration.[256]

After Trump's April 12 first face-to-face meeting with NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg, Trump announced that he had changed views about NATO. Trump had previously complained that NATO was "obsolete" as it did not fight terrorism.[257] On March 18, Trump called on NATO's member nations to contribute more to NATO.[258] After the White House meeting, Trump realized that NATO has been engaged in combating groups like ISIS. Trump will maintain the "US commitment to NATO while reiterating its member nations must step up their military financing".[257][259][260]

On January 29, Trump authorized the first military operation of his Presidency—a raid by US commandos on Al-Qaeda in Yakla, Baida in Yemen.[261] At least 14 jihadists were killed in the raid,[262] as well as 10 civilians, including children.[263] The raid also resulted in the death of Chief Petty Officer William Owens a 36-year-old Virginia-based Navy SEAL, the first U.S. combat casualty in Trump's presidency.[264]

According to The New York Times, Owen's death "came after a chain of mishaps and misjudgments that plunged the elite commandos into a ferocious 50-minute firefight that also left three others wounded and a $75 million aircraft deliberately destroyed."[261]

On April 6, 2017, Trump ordered a missile strike on Shayrat Air Base near Homs, in Syria. 59 Tomahawk missiles were launched from the USS Ross (DDG-71) and USS Porter (DDG-78) from the Mediterranean Sea.[265][266][267]

On April 8, four days after North Korea had test-fired a ballistic missile, an announcement by the United States Pacific Command (PACOM) commander was posted via U.S. Third Fleet Public Affairs stating that PACOM had ordered the USS Carl Vinson supercarrier to "sail north and report on station in the Western Pacific Ocean".[268] It was a premature announcement that led to a "glitch-ridden sequence of events"—a result of confusion created by a "miscommunication" between the Pentagon and the White House.[269] On April 8[270] and April 9, media outlets such as Fox News, RT, CNN, USA Today,[271] BBC[272][273] and others had published the erroneous announcement that warships were heading to the Korean Peninsula within the context of escalating US-North Korean tensions. In an interview with FOX Business Network's Maria Bartiromo that aired on April 12, President Trump warned, "We are sending an armada. Very powerful. We have submarines. Very powerful. Far more powerful than the aircraft carrier. That I can tell you."[274] By April 17, North Korea's deputy United Nations ambassador accused the United States of "turning the Korean peninsula into "the world's biggest hotspot" and the North Korean government stated "its readiness to declare war on the United States if North Korean forces were to be attacked."[275] On April 17, the Defense News broke the story that the Carl Vinson and its escorts were 3,500 miles from Korea, engaged in scheduled joint Royal Australian Navy exercises in the Indian Ocean.[269][276][277] According to Dana White, the Pentagon's chief spokeswoman, the Carl Vinson was heading north on April 18.[269] The Wall Street Journal reported on April 19, that the incident sparked both "criticism and ridicule" as some felt "duped by Trump". In the article, Hong Joon-pyo, a candidate in the 2017 South Korean presidential election, was quoted as saying, "What President Donald Trump said was important for the national security of South Korea. If that was a lie, then during Trump's term, South Korea will not trust whatever Trump says."[278]

On April 13, the United States dropped a "mother of all bombs" (MOAB) in the Nangarhar Province Afghanistan[279] the first use of the bomb on the battlefield.[280] On April 8, Staff Sgt. Mark De Alencar was killed during an operation against ISIS in Nangarhar Province.[281][282][283]

The most consequential shift in Trump's defense policy was the April 6 cruise-missile launch at a Syrian airbase.[284]

Trade policies edit

 
Peter Navarro, Director of the White House National Trade Council, addresses President Donald Trump's promises to American people, workers, and domestic manufacturers (Declaring American Economic Independence on June 28, 2016) in the Oval Office with Vice President Mike Pence and Secretary of Commerce Wilbur Ross before President Trump signs two Executive Orders regarding trade in March 2017.

On January 23, Trump fulfilled a campaign pledge by signing an executive order withdrawing the United States from the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) or Trans Pacific Partnership Agreement (TPPA).[223][285][286] According to the BBC, Trump had pledged to withdraw from the Trans Pacific Partnership (TPP) and he signed an executive order on the TPP his first few days.[222] However, the EO was largely symbolic since the deal has not been ratified by a divided US Congress."[287] The Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) or Trans Pacific Partnership Agreement (TPPA), was a trade agreement between the United States and eleven Pacific Rim nations—Australia, Brunei, Canada, Chile, Japan, Malaysia, Mexico, New Zealand, Peru, Singapore, and Vietnam that would have created a "free-trade zone for about 40 percent of the world's economy.[224][285][288]

On April 18, 2017, President Trump signed Executive Order 13788, which directed federal agencies to implement a "Buy American and Hire American" strategy.[289] The executive order directed federal agencies to implement a new system that favored higher-skilled, higher-paid applicants.[290][291][292] The order was the first initiative in response to a key pledge made by Trump during his presidential campaign to promote 'Buy American, Hire American'.[293] The EO was intended to order federal agencies to review and propose reforms to the H-1B visa system.[294] Through the order, Trump stated his broad policy of economic nationalism without having to go through Congress. Cabinet secretaries from Departments of Labor, Justice, Homeland Security, and State[290] would "fill in the details with reports and recommendations about what the administration can legally do".[295] Trump argued that the EO would "end the 'theft of American prosperity'", which he said had been brought on by low-wage immigrant labor.[296] The OMB and Department of Commerce issued a memorandum on implementation across federal procurement and grant-making activities in June 2017.[297] The order was revoked by President Biden on 25 January 2021.[298]

On March 31, President Donald Trump signed two executive orders on trade. One examines forms of "trade abuse", taking a country-by-country as well as product and industry look over 90 days at cheating, law enforcement, and currency misalignment by foreign countries that causes U.S. trade deficits. President Trump said the order ensures "that we fully collect all duties imposed on foreign importers that cheat, the cheaters". Another to strengthen anti-dumping rules and countervailing duties. The order directs Homeland Security, Commerce, and Treasury departments to ensure enforcement and "those who break the rules will face severe consequences".[299][300][301]

Trump, who had been dismissive of the Export-Import Bank (ExIm), made an about-face on April 15 by nominating Scott Garrett as head of the ExIm breaking a deadlock that had prevented the Bank from operating since 2014.[302] Although Trump had privately made known that he would not side with "conservative Republicans, including those in his own administration", who wanted to "cripple" the ExIm in February, he did not announce it publicly until April 13, when he told The Wall Street Journal that he would fill two seats of ExIm's five-seat board which would allow the Bank to make loans greater than $10 million.[303] Trump had been one of ExIm's harshest critics. Conservatives call it the 'Bank of Boeing' and an 'epicenter of crony capitalism'. Its supporters such as Boeing and General Electric Co, claim that it facilitates trade worth billions of dollars in exports helping hundreds of businesses.[304] Prior to making the announcement, Trump held two significant meetings related to ExIm—an April 3 formal visit with Egyptian president Abdel Fattah el-Sisi, who was negotiating for billions of dollars in ExIm financing,[305] and an April 11 meeting with Boeing Chief Executive Jim McNerney.[302] Sisi also met with Lockheed Martin and General Electric CEOs during his visit to the U.S. in April.[305]

International relations edit

Australia edit

A February 2 report by The Washington Post claimed that US President Donald Trump berated the Australian, Prime Minister Turnbull during one of Trump's first phone calls made to foreign officials. Trump stated that the 2016 asylum deal was an attempt to export the next Boston bombers to the United States.[306][307] The contentious deal involves a 2016 agreement between the Obama administration and Australia whereby the U.S. would resettle 1,250 refugees held in controversial[308] offshore immigration detention facilities—Manus and Nauru islands. In return, Australia would 'resettle refugees from El Salvador, Guatemala and Honduras".[306][309] The full transcript of that phone conversation was leaked in August 2017, and published by the Washington Post.[310] Later that day, Trump explained that while he respected Australia, they, along with many other countries, were "terribly taking advantage" of the United States.[311] The following day, Australian Ambassador to the United States Joe Hockey was sent to the White House and held meetings with White House Chief Strategist Steve Bannon and Chief of Staff Reince Priebus. Spicer described the phone call as "very cordial".[312] The 25-minute phone call on January 28, was described as "acrimonious" by Reuters and Trump's "worst call by far" with a foreign leader by The Washington Post.[309] During a joint news conference with Prime Minister Turnbull, Vice-President Pence—who was on a "10-day, four-country trip" in April to the Pacific Rim—announced that even if the United States did not "admire the agreement", Trump had made it clear the United States would honour the 2016 agreement to resettle refugees.[313] Turnbull responded, "whatever the reservations of the president are", the decision "speaks volumes for the commitment, the integrity of President Trump, and your administration, sir, to honour that commitment."[313] "The US is Australia's most important security partner, while China is its most important trading partner."[313]

Canada edit

 
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau (left) and President Donald Trump (right) meet in Washington in February 2017.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau met Trump in Washington, D.C. in February 2017.[314] Trudeau said that "The last thing Canadians expect is for me to come down and lecture another country on how they choose to govern," referring to Trump's "refugee ban"—Executive Order 13769.[315] The two leaders emphasized the importance of the two countries' ongoing relationship, with Trudeau adding that "there are times when we have differed in our approaches. And that's always been done firmly and respectfully."[315] Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross said that, "It has been a bad week for U.S.-Canada trade relations", as he announced stiff tariffs up stiff tariffs of up to 24% on Canadian lumber on April 24, as dairy product trade fell through.[316] The Canada–United States softwood lumber dispute has been since ongoing since the 1980s making it one of the longest trade disputes between the two countries, as well as one of the largest.[317] Trump is under pressure to begin renegotiating NAFTA, the trade deal between Canada, Mexico and the US.[316] On April 25, Canada's International Trade Minister Francois-Philippe Champagne and soft lumber industry representatives promoted trade with China in Beijing in response to what is perceived as U.S. protectionist policies.[318]

China edit

The Mar-a-Lago summit meeting on April 6 and 7 between Trump and President Xi Jinping of China, during the first 100 days of the new US administration, was heralded by The Telegraph as the "most significant bilateral summit in decades".[319] In spite of differences regarding Taiwan, the South China Sea and the most urgent issue—North Korea's nuclear programme—"the summit between the US and Chinese presidents had both symbolic and tangible successes," according to the South China Morning Post.[320] During the April 7–8 visit with Chinese President Xi Jinping, Trump acknowledged that international relations are much more complicated than he had imagined. In regards to North Korea, he had hoped to negotiate better trade deals with China in exchange for China dealing with the nuclear threat from North Korea. In an interview with Wall Street Journal's Gerald F. Seib Trump said, "After listening for 10 minutes, I realized it's not so easy. I felt pretty strongly that they had a tremendous power [over] North Korea. ... But it's not what you would think." Trump also affirmed that North Korea was the United States' "biggest international threat".[321]

The BBC reported on April 19 that China "was 'seriously concerned" about nuclear threats" as tensions between North Korea and the United States escalated with a "war of words"[322] between North Korea's leader Kim Jong-un and the Trump administration.[323][324] Recent threats included Vice President Mike Pence's statement that the period of "strategic patience" was over and his April 19 statement that the US "would meet any attack with an 'overwhelming response'". North Korea recently warned of "full-out nuclear war if Washington takes military action against it."[322] Trump has called for China to rein in North Korea, but state media outlet China Daily opined that "Washington must be aware of the limitations to Beijing's abilities, and refrain from assuming that the matter can be consigned entirely to Beijing alone."[325] China Daily considered the U.N. Security Council statement adopted on April 20 condemning North Korea's recent attempted missile launch,[324] as an indication that the Trump administration is considering a "diplomatic solution".[325]

In an April 12 interview with Wall Street Journal, Trump said he had changed his mind and he would not label China a currency manipulator, which had been one of his 100-day pledges. By April he believed that China had not been manipulating its currency for months. He did not want to "jeopardize" talks with the Chinese "on confronting the threat of North Korea".[2][3] Early in Trump's presidency, the world's largest financial newspaper, Nikkei Asian Review, had reported on February 1, that Trump had labelled China and Japan as currency manipulators.[326]

The Trump administration confirmed its commitment to defend Japan against China's claims to the Senkaku Islands in the East China Sea through the Treaty of Mutual Cooperation and Security between the United States and Japan during a U.S. Defense Secretary James Mattis's visit to Japan on February 4.[327] By February 9, US-Chinese relations—the most important bilateral relationship—had remained strained,[328][329] President Xi Jinping and Trump had not spoken and this had "drawn increasing scrutiny".[330] Xi was concerned by the December 2, 2016, phone call from Taiwan President Tsai Ing-wen to Trump[331] and Trump's questioning of the One China policy.[332][333][334] On February 10, Trump and Xi Jinping spoke on the phone for the first time since Donald Trump took office, during which Donald Trump committed to honoring the One China policy at Xi's request.[335][336]

During the World Economic Forum annual meeting in Davos on January 17–20, China's President Xi Jinping, as keynote speaker, "vigorously" defended globalization in a speech that the Financial Times described as "one would have expected to come from a US president". Mr. Xi observed that "blaming economic globalisation for the world's problems is inconsistent with reality ... globalisation has powered global growth and facilitated movement of goods and capital, advances in science, technology and civilisation, and interactions among people[337][338] In 2015, China became the United States' largest trade partner, placing Canada second.[339] The Times 2017 article, citing an analysis by Peterson Institute for International Economics, noted that "China and Mexico together account for a quarter of US trade".[338] Concerns have been raised about Trump's proposed imposition of a 45 percent tariff on imports from China.[340][341][342] On January 23, The U.S. Commerce Department announced new countervailing duties (CVDs) ranging from 38.61 to 65.46 percent on Chinese vehicles in the antidumping case. In 2015, over 8.9 million Chinese truck and bus tires worth $1.07 billion were imported to the United States.[343]

At his Senate confirmation hearing as Secretary of State, in mid-January, Rex Tillerson's statements about the South China Sea, "set the stage for a possible crisis between the world's two biggest economies should his comments become official American policy" and "put further strains on one of the world's most important bilateral relationships."[344] According to an article on January 28, in the South China Morning Post, an official from China's Central Military Commission's Defence Mobilisation Department, ranking Chinese military official considers war between China and the United States a real possibility during Trump's term as president.[345] An article in The Guardian claims, "The bad news is that if in the coming months or years Trump faces an ignominious end to his presidency through scandal or mismanagement, a national crisis—involving China, or ISIS or another foreign actor—could allow him to cling to power."[346]

Egypt edit

On April 3, Trump hosted a formal visit with Egyptian president Abdel Fattah el-Sisi, in an effort to "reset" relations between the two countries, offering the U.S. government's "strong backing".[305] Ties between the two countries were strained since Sisi deposed Egyptian president Mohamed Morsi during the July 2013 military coup.[347][348] Trump publicly stated that Sisi's autocratic leadership was 'fantastic'.[305] Sisi, who is seeking "billions of dollars in financing" from the Export-Import Bank for large investments in infrastructure investments, also met with the representatives from the IMF, the World Bank, Lockheed Martin and General Electric.[305] Trump nominated a new head of ExIm which facilitates its operation—the ExIm had been hamstrung since 2014 because of opposition by Republicans.[302] During his talks with Sisi in April, Senate Foreign Relations Committee Chairman Bob Corker (R-Tenn.) had advocated for the release of six humanitarian workers, including a U.S. citizen—30-year-old Aya Hijazi and her husband, who had been imprisoned in Egypt since May 1, 2014.[305] A court in Egypt dropped all charges against them on April 16.[305]

European Union edit

In a 60-minute interview at Trump Tower in mid-January, with Michael Gove of the Times of London and Kai Diekmann of Bild, Trump praised Brexit, criticized NATO as "obsolete", and the European Union as "basically a vehicle for Germany". He said it was a "very catastrophic mistake" on Angela Merkel's part to admit a million refugees—whom he refers to as "illegals".[82] These "worrying declarations", among others, compelled the President of the European Council, Donald Tusk, to raise concerns in a letter to 27 European leaders, that the Trump administration seemed to "question the last 70 years of American foreign policy", placing the European Union in a "difficult situation".[349]

Iran edit

There are no formal diplomatic relations between Iran and the United States. Iranian citizens were temporary banned from entering the United States by the executive order "Protecting the Nation From Foreign Terrorist Entry Into the United States." Late on April 18, 2017, the Trump Administration certified that Iran had continued to comply with the 2015 nuclear framework agreement.[350] During his campaign, Trump had denounced the agreement as 'the worst deal ever' but was frustrated in his plans to renegotiate the nuclear deal as "canceling the deal would likely cause significant problems."[350]

Israel edit

Israel's prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Trump held their first official visit at the White House on February 15. At the press conference, Trump urged Netanyahu to "'hold back' on building Jewish settlements on territories occupied by Israel in 1967 'for a little bit'".[351] According to The Economist, Trump appeared to step back from the "long-standing, bipartisan American insistence that peace can be reached only through the establishment of a sovereign Palestinian state alongside the Jewish one", the two-state solution.[351] Trump's priority of destroying the Muslim radicals of Islamic State (IS)" differs from Netanyahu's. Israel is more concerned about "containing Iran, the largest power in the Shia Muslim world. Given that Iran is itself fighting IS in Syria and Iraq, the two goals could even be in conflict."[351] In a marked change from his visit to the White House under the Obama administration, Netanyahu blurred the distinction by "denouncing both IS and Iran in the same attack on 'militant Islam' and hailing Mr Trump's 'great courage' in tackling 'radical Islamic terror'".[351]

Mexico edit

Since early in Trump's presidency, Mexico and United States faced a diplomatic crisis. Mexican President Enrique Peña Nieto opposes Trump's approach to the renegotiation of NAFTA and the implications of Trump's Executive Order 13767.[352][353] After decades of cooperation between the two nations relations between the US and Mexico are seriously weakened.[354]

North Korea edit

On February 12, North Korea tested a ballistic solid-fuel missile,[355] the Pukkuksong-2, which is part of a series of missile tests that have largely defined the hostile North Korea–United States relations over recent years.[356] According to The Economist, on February 13, while Trump promised "to deal with the 'big, big' problem of North Korea 'very strongly'", he has few options.[355] Trump received the news of the launch during the first official visit of Japan's prime minister, Shinzo Abe. They were dining at Mar-a-Lago, Trump's Florida resort.[355]

Russia edit

According to a Reuters report on February 9, 2017, in his first 60-minute telephone call with Putin, Putin inquired about extending New START (Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty) a nuclear arms reduction treaty between the United States and the Russia signed in 2010, which was expected to last until 2021.[357][358] and, after ratification,[359][360] Trump denounced the treaty claiming that it favored Russia and was "one of several bad deals negotiated by the Obama administration".[361] The New York Times reported that on February 14, Russia deployed a new type of fully operational ground-launched intermediate-range cruise missile that "violates a landmark arms control treaty". The Americans have changed its name from SSC-X-8 to SSC-8, reflecting its status as "operational" not "X" referring to "in development".[362]

On February 16, 2017, President Trump's Secretary of Defense, James Mattis, declared that the United States was not currently prepared to collaborate with Russia on military matters—including future anti-ISIL US operations.[363]

On February 24, Trump "risked triggering a new Cold War-style arms race between Washington and Moscow. In an interview with Reuters, Trump said that the "treaty limiting Russian and U.S. nuclear arsenals was a bad deal for Washington" and he "would put the U.S. nuclear arsenal "at the top of the pack". In response, Russia's Konstantin Kosachev wrote on his Facebook page, "arguably Trump's most alarming statement on the subject of relations with Russia".[364]

Trump's campaign slogan 'Make America great again', if that means nuclear supremacy, will return the world to the worst times of the arms race in the '50s and '60s.

— Konstantin Kosachev, Chair of the Foreign Affairs Committee of the Russian Federation Council February 24, 2017

Trump had "promised one of the 'greatest military buildups in American history' in a feisty, campaign-style speech extolling robust nationalism" at the annual Conservative Political Action Conference on February 24 at National Harbor.[365][366][367]

Syria edit

On April 5, 2017, Trump responded to the April 4 chemical attack allegedly by Syrian Armed Forces on rebel-held Khan Shaykhun in Idlib Province, which enveloped men, women, and children in a suffocating fog of sarin gas, leaving more than eighty people dead and over three hundred more injured,[368][369] saying that "... my attitude towards Syria and Assad has changed very much."[370] Both Tillerson and Nikki Haley had previously stated that the Trump administration had no intention of interfering in President Bashar Assad's leadership in the Syrian Civil War, as the US focused on eliminating ISIS.[371][372][373][374]

United Kingdom edit

In January 2017, the Prime Minister Theresa May invited Trump to a state visit to the UK when she met Trump in Washington DC.[375][376][377] The visit was planned to occur in June, although it may be delayed to July to coincide with the upcoming G20 summit in Hamburg.[378] Some sources have suggested that the UK government may delay the visit until after the House of Commons is in recess for the summer to avoid criticism from MPs.[379] The Speaker of the House of Commons, John Bercow, stated on February 6, 2017, that Trump would not be welcome to address parliament during any future state visit, drawing applause and cheering from some Members of Parliament.[380]

More than 1,860,000 people signed a petition to prevent Trump from making an official state visit, which states that such a visit "would cause embarrassment to Her Majesty the Queen".[381][382] The FCO responded to this petition by stating that HM Government recognises the strong views expressed by the many signatories of this petition, but does not support this petition." Lord Ricketts, former Permanent Under-Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs, said that the unprecedented speed of May's invitation has put the Queen in a "very difficult situation".[383] He questioned whether Trump was "specially deserving of this exceptional honour", given that US presidents are usually only invited to such visits after at least a year in office.[383] Writing to May, opposition leader Jeremy Corbyn stated that the "invite should be withdrawn until the executive orders are gone".[382]

It was suggested that Trump's visit would have to take place outside London, after Sir Bernard Hogan-Howe, the chief of the Metropolitan Police, said that he had concerns about the visit given the number of protests expected.[384] One suggestion considered was for Trump to address a rally at the National Exhibition Centre in Birmingham,[378] a city where 50.4% of voters voted to leave the EU,[385] rather than London, which saw 59.9% voting to remain.[386] Local politicians and activists in Birmingham promised to stage protests if the visit is moved, with Shabana Mahmood, Labour MP for the Birmingham Ladywood constituency, saying that "President Trump with his hateful and divisive rhetoric, policies and Muslim ban is not welcome here."[387]

During a March 14 Fox & Friends interview, Andrew Napolitano said, "Three intelligence sources have informed Fox News that President Obama went outside the chain of command, using the British GCHQ to implement surveillance on Donald Trump to avoid leaving 'American fingerprints'."[388] On March 16, Press Secretary Sean Spicer repeated Napolitano's claim at a White House press briefing. The following day, a GCHQ spokesperson called Napolitano's claim "utterly ridiculous".[389] The White House denied reports that it had apologized to the British government for the accusation.[390]

 
The 2017 Women's March in Chicago

Government and Finance (G&F) edit

The G&F Division focuses on issues related to Congress, the executive and the judicial branches, the budget and appropriations, legislative process, homeland security, elections and certain financial issues such as public debt, inflation, savings, GDP, taxation and interest rates, banking, financial institutions, insurance and securities, public finance, fiscal and monetary policy, public debt, interest rates, gross domestic product, inflation and savings.[391]

Supreme Court nomination edit

 
Judge Neil Gorsuch, his wife Louise,[392] and President Donald Trump during the announcement in the East Room of the White House

On the evening of January 30, Trump announced his nomination of U.S. Appeals Court judge Neil Gorsuch for the Supreme Court fulfilling his campaign pledge that he would choose someone 'in the mold' of the late Justice Antonin Scalia.[393]

Following the February 3 ruling by federal judge James Robart, which temporarily blocked Trump's travel ban on people from seven Muslim countries, Trump has been openly critical of the Federal judiciary.[394] According to CNN and Washington Post, on February 8, Gorsuch expressed concern that Trump's remarks on the judiciary were 'demoralizing' and 'disheartening' to the independence of the judiciary.[395]

Gorsuch was approved by the Senate Judiciary committee on April 3.[396] Senate Republicans invoked the "nuclear option" after the April 6 filibuster that prevented cloture.[397] After a year-long Republican block on nominations, the Senate confirmed Gorsuch's nomination with a 54–45 vote, mainly along party lines.[398][399] Gorsuch took office in a private ceremony on April 10.

Hours after Gorsuch and four other Supreme Court conservatives justices voted on April 20 to deny a stay of execution request from eight inmates on Arkansas death-row, Ledell Lee was put to death with a lethal injection, the first in Arkansas since 2005.[400][401] Two inmates—Jack Jones and Marcel Williams—received lethal injections on April 24.[402]

Monetary policy edit

On April 19, in an interview with The Wall Street Journal—in a reversal of previous statements—Trump said he was considering keeping Janet Yellen as chair of the Federal Reserve System, which oversees the U.S. monetary policy.[3] He explained that, "I do like a low-interest rate policy, I must be honest with you." In the same interview, Trump said he would not label China a currency manipulator,[3] which had been one of his 100-day pledges.[2] Trump expressed concerns in that interview that, "I think our dollar is getting too strong, and partially that's my fault because people have confidence in me. But that's hurting—that will hurt ultimately." He believes a low dollar favors the U.S. in international trade.[3] From November 8, 2016—when Trump was elected—to December 30, 2016, the trade-weighted average of the foreign exchange value of the U.S. dollar (TWEXB) increased 4.4 percent.[403] Towards the end of the first 100 days, the TWEXB had dropped two percent.[403] This table shows some highs and lows of the Trade Weighted U.S. Dollar Index: Broad [TWEXB] from 2002 to April 2017.[404]

Sample of trade weighted averages of foreign exchange value USD (highs/lows ) DMY[404]
February 20, 2002 April 9, 2008 July 23, 2011 July 27, 2011 March 18, 2015 June 3, 2015 February 17, 2016 May 4, 2016 26-08-2016 November 23, 2016 04-01-2017 19-04-2017
129.3639 95.6084 102.1682 94.0323 117.4927 115.5347 123.7823 118.6478 120.2955 127.2899 128.5246 124.0479

Small government edit

On January 23, President Trump signed an executive order that froze all federal hiring except for the military. The order specified that no new positions can be created and no currently vacant positions may be filled unless an agency head believes that the position is "necessary to meet national security or public safety responsibilities". The order is due to expire once the head of the Office of Management and Budget, Mick Mulvaney, creates a "long-term plan to reduce the size of the Federal Government's workforce through attrition".[405]

On January 24, the Associated Press reported on emails from the Administration to some government agencies sent shortly after the inauguration, which "detailed specific prohibitions" banning certain government agencies, such as the Agricultural Research Service Agriculture Department from issuing "press releases, blog updates or posts to the agency's social media accounts".[406] In what the Associated Press described as a "broader communications clampdown within the executive branch", the Administration "instituted a media blackout".[406][407] In his January 25 press briefing, White House press secretary Sean Spicer claimed that the emails did not come from the Administration: "They haven't been directed by us to do anything ... That directive did not come from here."[408]

On January 23, in a Presidential Memorandum, the president ordered a temporary government-wide hiring freeze[409][410] of the civilian work force in the executive branch, which is managed by the Office of Personnel Management. This will prevent federal agencies, except for the offices of the new presidential appointees, national security, the military and public safety, from filling vacant positions.[411][412] The Brookings Institution questioned whether this freeze would include financial regulators who exercise independence from the executive branch—such as the Federal Reserve Board of Governors (Fed), Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC), the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) among others.[413] In a Fox News report, based on statistics from the Office of Personnel Management, the number of executive branch employees "hasn't been this low since 1965" and has been "more or less steady" since 2001.[411][414]

Economic policy of Donald Trump edit

Trump's key economic policies included the dismantling of the Dodd–Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act, and the repeal of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (ACA).[415]

According to the April 28, 2017, Commerce Department report, in the first quarter of 2017, there was a "sharp decline from the 2.1% in Q1 2016 to 0.7% in Q1 2017—representing the weakest quarterly economic growth in three years. The report presents a statistical analysis of the American economy in the 2017 Q1—the gross domestic product (GDP).[416] In spite of the soft GDP, by the end of Q1 2017, the S&P 500 was near an all-time high, representing a 12% rise from the first quarter of 2016, as investor confidence remained elevated[417] based on Trump's promise to cut taxes, deregulate and spend heavily on infrastructure such as roads and bridges.

 
Unemployment in the United States 2009–2016.[418][419] Jobless rate was 4.5 in March 2017.[418]

In March 2017, the unemployment rate fell to 4.5 percent[418][420] and the Consumer Sentiment Index reached 125.6, a level of consumer confidence in the United States last seen in December 2000.[421] It fell to 120.3 in April.[422] Consumer confidence or soft data contrasted with real consumer spending or hard data, with a "big drop-off" in the amount Americans actually spent during Trump's first 100 days.[423]

Consumer confidence index[424]
04-2016 05-2016 06-2016 07-2016 08-2016 09-2016 10-2016 11-2016 12-2016 01-2017 02-2017 03-2017 04-2017
94.7 92.4 97.4 96.7 101.8 103.5 100.8 109.4 113.3 111.6 116.1 124.9 120.3
Real Personal Consumption Expenditures[425]
06-2009 06-2010 06-2011 06-2012 06-2013 06-2014 06-2015 06-2016 12-2016 01-2017 02-2017
9,801.1 10,021.2 10,248.3 10,390.3 10,543.8 10,851.8 11,199.2 11,522.2 11,709.4 11,684.8 11,676.1

Changes to Dodd–Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act edit

On February 3, after a meeting with his strategic and policy forum, which included Jamie Dimon, Chairman and CEO JPMorgan Chase, Trump issued an Executive Order, Core Principles for Regulating the United States Financial System,[426][427][428] which directed the "Treasury secretary to submit a report on recommended changes to bank regulations in 120 days."[429] Trump wants to get "banks to lend money more aggressively"[430] and wants to make changes to the Dodd–Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act (2010)[431] which was enacted in response to the Great Recession, bringing significant changes to U. S. financial regulation.[432]

We expect to be cutting a lot out of Dodd-Frank ... Frankly, I have so many people, friends of mine, that have nice businesses that can't borrow money. They just can't get any money because the banks won't let them borrow because of rules and regulations in Dodd-Frank.

— Trump in meeting with his business advisory council, February 3

In an interview on February 3, with The Wall Street Journal, Trump's National Economic Council Director, Gary Cohn, announced the planned rollback of the fiduciary rule, which stated that brokers and advisers who work with tax-advantaged retirement savings "must work in the best interest of their clients" even at the expense of their own profits.[433]

Deregulation edit

One of the first acts by the Trump administration was an order signed by Chief of Staff Reince Priebus on January 20, under the subject "Regulatory Freeze Pending Review" to all Heads of Executive Departments and Agencies ordering agencies to immediately suspend all pending regulations and to "send no regulation" to the Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs (OFR) until the Trump administration can review them except for "emergency situations" or "urgent circumstances" allowed by the Director or Acting Director, Mark Sandy,[434][435][436] of the Office of Management and Budget (OMB).[406][437][438] This was comparable to prior moves by the Obama and Bush administrations shortly after their inaugurations to revert executive orders by outgoing presidents, signed in their final days in office.[439]

On January 30, Trump signed his seventh Executive Order "Reducing Regulation and Controlling Regulatory Costs".[440]

Deregulation and corporations edit

At a January 23 meeting with leaders of the United States' largest corporations, including Ford's Mark Fields, Dell Technologies' Michael Dell, Lockheed Martin's Marillyn Hewson, Under Armour's Kevin Plank, Arconic's Klaus Kleinfeld, Whirlpool's Jeff Fettig, Johnson & Johnson's Alex Gorsky, Dow Chemical's Andrew Liveris, U.S. Steel's Mario Longhi, SpaceX's Elon Musk, International Paper's Mark Sutton, and Corning's Wendell Weeks promised to reward the companies who stay in the United States with aggressive cuts on U.S. federal regulations governing their companies by "75 percent or more".[441][442][443]

Trump meets with CEOs of pharmaceutical companies edit

On January 31, Trump met with CEOs of pharmaceutical firms, including Novartis's Joseph Jimenez who also represented the Pharmaceutical Research and Manufacturers of America—the pharmaceutical industry's powerful lobbying group, Merck & Co.'s Kenneth Frazier, Johnson & Johnson, Celgene's Robert Hugin, Eli Lilly, Amgen's Robert Bradway.[444] Trump called for lower prices, "We have no choice. For Medicare, for Medicaid. We have to get the prices way down." In return, he promised to boost the pharmaceutical companies competitiveness by curbing regulations "from 9,000 pages" to "100 pages", and by lowering pharmaceutical companies' tax rates. Trump noted that Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approvals "force pharmaceutical companies to spend years and billions of dollars developing drugs". He promised his nomination for FDA Commissioner would oversee an FDA overhaul.[445] In the listening session with pharmaceutical industry leaders, Trump noted that, "it costs sometimes $2.5 billion on average, actually, to come up with a new product. ... 15 years, $2.5 billion to come up with a product where there's not even a safety problem. So it's crazy. I'm surprised you can't get them to move faster than that."[446]

Trump had promised in March 2016, to reform the pharmaceutical industry, including the removal of existing free market barriers to allow imported, dependable, safe, reliable, and cheaper drugs from overseas, bringing more options to American consumers.[447] Following Trump's press conference on January 11, Fortune claimed that the largest pharmaceutical companies had lost over $20 billion in 20 minutes.[448] The Medicare Prescription Drug, Improvement, and Modernization Act (2003) expressly prohibited Medicare from negotiating bulk prescription drug prices and Trump had pledged to revert this. Following the morning meeting with CEOs on January 31, Trump abandoned his pledge to allow "Medicare negotiate bulk discounts in the price it pays for prescription drugs."[449]

Limitations on executive agency members lobbying edit

On January 28, Trump signed an Executive Order to fulfilling his campaign pledge to limit lobbying of executive agency members.[450]

Department of Justice edit

On February 8, Alabama Senator Jeff Sessions, who was nominated by Trump in January, was confirmed as United States Attorney General (A.G.), the head of the Justice Department per 28 U.S.C. § 503. He is the United States government's chief law enforcement officer and lawyer with 113,000 employees working under his leadership. According to The Washington Post, Sessions' "conservative, populist views have shaped many" of Trump's "early policies, including on immigration".[451] The nomination battle was described by The New York Times, as "a bitter and racially charged".[452] The confirmation process for Trump's nominee Senator Jeff Sessions was described as " strikingly contentious" by The New York Times;[453] with Fox News calling it a "wild night",[454] and CNN calling the "rare rebuke" a "stunning moment"[455] as Senator Mitch McConnell invoked Rule XIX to silence Senator Elizabeth Warren for the rest of the hearing.[454] McConnell interrupted Warren as she read several pages by Coretta Scott King and Senator Ted Kennedy regarding Session's alleged racial bias from the 500-plus page transcript submitted in 1986, that contributed to the decision by the then-Republican-led Judiciary Committee to reject his nomination to a federal judgeship. Warren immediately live-streamed her reading of the letter, critical of Sessions, that the widow of Martin Luther King Jr. had written to Senator Strom Thurmond in 1986.[456] and numerous media outlets made the full-text available.[455][457]

Trump appointed Dana J. Boente to serve as acting Attorney General until Session's Senate Confirmation.[458] After firing Yates, Trumped signed his eleventh Executive Order 13775 on February 9, specifically reversing the DOJ's line of succession in Obama's EO 13762 in order to appoint the United States Attorney for the Eastern District of Virginia—Dana J. Boente—as Acting Attorney General.[459][460] Trump revoked EO 13775 on March 31 with "Presidential Executive Order on Providing an Order of Succession Within the Department of Justice.

Boente had replaced Acting Attorney General Sally Yates who was fired by Trump for ordering the Justice Department to not defend Trump's Executive Order 13769 which restricted entry to the United States.[461] Yates claimed that, "At present, I am not convinced that the defense of the executive order is consistent with these responsibilities [of the Department of Justice], nor am I convinced that the executive order is lawful".[462][463]

Voter fraud claims edit

Since November 2016, and during his presidency, Trump has repeated voter fraud allegations that between three and five million people voted illegally and cost him the popular vote to Hillary Clinton, and also that thousands of voters were illegally bused from Massachusetts into New Hampshire where former Senator Kelly Ayotte was defeated, and where Trump narrowly lost to Clinton in 2016.[111]

Trump had announced on January 25 that he was conducting an investigation into voter fraud. He repeated unsubstantiated claims about the number of fraudulent voters and referred to VoteStand founder Gregg Phillips, who could not produce any evidence of voter fraud.[464][465] In January, US News reported that members of Trump's cabinet and family were registered to vote in multiple states.[466] On February 10, Federal Election Commission (FEC) Commissioner Ellen L. Weintraub issued a statement calling on Trump to provide the evidence of what would "constitute thousands of felony criminal offenses under New Hampshire law."[112] By February 12, Stephen Miller was still unable to provide concrete evidence to support claims of voter fraud in an interview with Stephanopoulos,[110][111] but he seemed to direct Stephanopoulos to the often-cited 2012 Pew Research Center study.[110][113] In fact, the 2012 Pew report entitled "Inaccurate, Costly, and Inefficient Evidence That America's Voter Registration System Needs an Upgrade," which was based on 2008 data, was about "outdated voter rolls, not fraudulent votes" and "makes no mention of noncitizens voting or registering to vote."[114] The report showed that because of inefficiencies in the voter system, 24 percent of eligible citizens were not able to be registered, representing "51 million citizens."[113]: 8  Problems related to voter registration often affected "military personnel—especially those deployed overseas and their families—who were almost twice as likely to report registration problems as was the general public in 2008."[113]: 7  In November, "the former director of Pew's election program" explained, "We found millions of out of date registration records due to people moving or dying, but found no evidence that voter fraud resulted."[114] On January 25, Spicer confirmed in a press briefing that Trump continued to believe that "millions voted illegally in the election" based on "studies and evidence that people have presented him."[467] This included an often-cited and contested[467][468] 2014 Old Dominion University study entitled "Do non-citizens vote in U.S. elections?"[469] Using Cooperative Congressional Election Study data from 2008 and 2010, the researchers had argued that more than 14% of non-citizens "indicated that they were registered to vote."[467]

2018 United States federal budget edit

Trump submitted his first budget request which recommends funding levels for the next fiscal year 2018—covering the period from October 1, 2017, to September 30, 2018—to the 115th Congress.[470][471] Trump's request including a $639 billion defense budget and corresponding major cuts to other federal departments.[256]

To avert a possible government shutdown, the Trump administration face an April 28 deadline—the expiration of the December 10, 2016, continuing resolution (H.R. 2028) (Public Law 114-254).[472][473][474][Notes 1][475] Discussion time on controversial issues such as funding for a border wall defunding Planned Parenthood,[10] was limited by the two-week Easter recess that began on April 7.[11] The government was shutdown during the Clinton and Obama administrations as a result of clashes between Republicans in Congress and Democrats in the White House. In late April 2017, Republicans have control of both Congress and the White House.[476][477] A shutdown would result in "government agencies [locking] their doors, national parks [refusing] visitors and federal workers [being] told not to report to work".[477] The appropriations process cannot be accomplished without consulting the Democrats—unlike rolling back federal regulations with Congressional Review Acts and attempts to repeal Obamacare.[477]

Tax reform edit

The White House memo entitled "2017 Tax Reform for Economic Growth and American Jobs" was presented on April 26[478] in what The Wall Street Journal described as his "finest moment" in the first 100 days and a policy and political success.[479] Individual reform includes "reducing the  7 tax brackets to  3 tax brackets for 10%, 25% and 35%, doubling the standard deduction, providing tax relief for families with child and dependent care expenses." The taxation system will be simplified to "eliminate targeted tax breaks that mainly benefit the wealthiest taxpayers, protect the home ownership and charitable gift tax deductions, repeal the Alternative Minimum Tax, repeal the death tax and repeal the 3.8% Obamacare tax that hits small businesses and investment income."[478] Business reform includes "15% business tax rate, territorial tax system to level the playing field for American companies, one-time tax on trillions of dollars held overseas and elimination of tax breaks for special interests."[478] The memo did not provide legislative content but rather broad outlines that will be developed in Congress but may face some opposition from both sides.[480]

Energy, environmental, and science policy edit

Climate change edit

Trump rescinded many Obama-era regulations aimed at cutting the volume of greenhouse gas emissions, which faced strong opposition and legal challenges.[481] The key focus of his deregulatory efforts was the Clean Power Plan created under the Obama administration, which restricted GHG emissions at coal-fired plants.[482] Trump proposed defunding the Clean Power Plan in his FY2018 budget, and his March 28 executive order directed Environmental Protection Agency administrator Scott Pruitt to review the Clean Power Plan.[483] He also lifted a 14-month-old halt on new coal leases on federal lands.[484]

Dakota Access and Keystone XL pipelines edit

On January 24, Trump signed three Presidential Memoranda regarding construction of pipelines; "Regarding Construction of American Pipelines" was his fifth memoranda, "Regarding Construction of the Dakota Access Pipeline" was his sixth and the seventh was "Regarding Construction of the Keystone XL Pipeline". These were intended to "clear the way to government approval"[485] of the Dakota Access and the Keystone XL pipelines.[486] In a meeting with small business leaders on January 30, Trump clarified that one of the reasons for approving the pipelines was to insist that pipeline makers implement a made-in-America approach.[487] He revealed how the federal government could exercise eminent domain strategically in the appropriation of private land, to pressure pipeline makers to use American raw steel, for example.[487]

Deregulation on environmental policies and programs edit

Then White House Chief of Staff Reince Priebus signed an order on January 24, temporarily delaying the Environmental Protection Agency's (EPA) 30 final regulations that were pending in the Federal Register[488] until March 21, 2017.[489] Employees in the EPA's Office of Acquisition Management, received an email "within hours of President Trump's swearing in", from the new EPA administration, asking "that all contract and grant awards be temporarily suspended, effective immediately" which included "task orders and work assignments" until "further clarification".[406][407][490]

On February 1, the Trump administration published a Statement of Administration Policy to allow coal companies to dump mining waste in streams by nullifying the Department of the Interior regulation known as the "Stream Protection Rule", established in the Obama administration.[491] Under the Congressional Review Act Congress passed the resolution to repeal on February 1 and the Senate also approved it on February 2.[492][493] The Statement nullified the Waste Prevention, Production Subject to Royalties, and Resource Conservation which limited venting, flaring, and leaks during oil and natural gas production. The Repeal of Stream Protection Rule (115-5) was signed into law by Trump on February 16.

Additionally, the February 1 policy statement nullified the rule on Disclosure of Payments by Resource Extraction Issuers, a Securities and Exchange Commission regulation which required resource extraction issuers to report payments "to governments for the commercial development of oil, natural gas or minerals".[491] The Repeal of the Disclosure of Payments by Resource Extraction Issuers Rule (115-4) was signed into law by Trump on February 14, 2017.

On March 29, 2017, EPA Administrator Scott Pruitt overturned the 2015 EPA revocation and denied the 2007 administrative petition by the Natural Resources Defense Council and the Pesticide Action Network North America (PANNA) to ban the widely used Dow Chemical Company's chlorpyrifos.[494] The eight-year delay by the EPA to respond to PANNA, had resulted in a court case, PANNA v. EPA, in which EPA was ordered to respond by October 2015. EPA revoked "all tolerances for the insecticide chlorpyrifos"[494][495][496] and Pruitt overturned the 2015 decision.[494]

On March 29, 2017, EPA Administrator Scott Pruitt overturned the 2015 EPA revocation and denied the administrative petition by the Natural Resources Defense Council and the Pesticide Action Network North America to ban chlorpyrifos.[494]

By reversing the previous administration's steps to ban one of the most widely used pesticides in the world, we are returning to using sound science in decision-making—rather than predetermined results.

— Statement by Scott Pruitt, EPA, Administrator March 29, 2017

Accompanied by coal executives and coal miners, Trump signed a "sweeping executive order" on March 28, at the EPA. In his remarks he praised coal miners along with pipelines and U.S. manufacturing and addressed the coal miners directly, "Come on, fellas. Basically, you know what this is? You know what it says, right? You're going back to work."[497] Trump instructed EPA "regulators to rewrite key rules curbing U.S. carbon emissions and other environmental regulations."[497]

Acts of the 115th United States Congress edit

By April 10, Trump had signed 21 Acts of Congress into law under the 115th United States Congress—laws 115-2 through 115–22. The GAO Access and Oversight Act of 2017 (Pub. L.Tooltip Public Law (United States) 115–3 (text) (PDF),H.R. 72) was the second law Trump signed as president. The bill ensures that the Government Accountability Office (GAO) has full access to the database, National Directory of New Hires, to ensure that recipients of federal means-tested programs like Unemployment Insurance, Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP), Earned income tax credit (EITC), and Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (TANF) are eligible, thereby reducing government waste and increasing accountability.[498][499]

Congressional Review Act edit

Beginning in January, the Trump administration used the 1996 Congressional Review Act (CRA) to overturn regulations—some of them major—finalized during the final months of Obama's tenure. By April 6, Trump had signed into law 11 resolutions of disapproval under the CRA, after they were passed by the Republican majority in the House and Senate.[9][10] Under the Congressional Review Act, Congress can circumvent the Senate's filibuster to overturn legislation issued in the last 60 days of the previous administration.[230]

On February 14, the Repeal of the Disclosure of Payments by Resource Extraction Issuers Rule (Pub. L.Tooltip Public Law (United States) 115–4 (text) (PDF), H.J.Res. 41) was signed, nullifying the Securities and Exchange Commission regulation known as the "Disclosure of Payments by Resource Extraction Issuers" rule.[500] The SEC regulation was mandated by the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act, which was similar to transparency initiatives adopted by the European Union and Canada.[501] Advocates argued that "Disclosure of Payments" rule prevented companies from bribing foreign governments and engaging in other forms of corruption. Those who argued for its repeal claimed that rule had placed an excessive burden on American companies and created a competitive disadvantage.[500]

On February 16, Trump signed the Repeal of Stream Protection Rule (H.J.Res. 38 Pub. L.Tooltip Public Law (United States) 115–5 (text) (PDF)),[491] which nullified the DOI regulation known as the Stream Protection Rule.[492][493]

On February 28, the Repeal of the Implementation of the NICS Improvement Amendments Act of 2007 (H.J.Res. 40 Pub. L.Tooltip Public Law (United States) 115–8 (text) (PDF)) was signed into law, which overturned the Social Security Administration related to the implementation of the NICS Improvement Amendments Act of 2007, which had amended the National Instant Criminal Background Check System to prohibit those with severe mental illness from possessing firearms.[502]

On March 27, Trump overturned the Bureau of Land Management's (BLM), which nullified the "Waste Prevention, Production Subject to Royalties, and Resource Conservation", also known as "Methane and Waste Prevention" or "methane venting and flaring rule" which "limited venting, flaring, and leaks during oil and natural gas production".[503][504] with Bill (H.J.Res. 44 Pub. L.Tooltip Public Law (United States) 115–11 (text) (PDF)) disapproved the DOI rule relating to Bureau of Land Management "regulations that established the procedures used to prepare, revise, or amend land use plans pursuant to the Federal Land Policy and Management Act of 1976". On the same day, he signed the "H.J.Res.37—Disapproving the rule submitted by the Department of Defense, the General Services Administration, and the National Aeronautics and Space Administration relating to the Federal Acquisition Regulation" (H.J.Res. 37 Pub. L.Tooltip Public Law (United States) 115–11 (text) (PDF)), which overturned the Federal Acquisition Regulation (FAR) "Fair Pay and Safe Workplaces"—known by its opponents as the "Blacklisting" Rule. On March 27, he also signed the ED State and Local Education Accountability Rules (H.J.Res. 57 Pub. L.Tooltip Public Law (United States) 115–13 (text) (PDF)), which overruled the Department of Education rule relating to accountability and State plans under the Elementary and Secondary Education Act of 1965 and the ED Teacher Preparation Rule (H.J.Res. 58 Pub. L.Tooltip Public Law (United States) 115–14 (text) (PDF)), overturning the Department of Education relating to teacher preparation issues.

On March 31, Trump signed the DOL Unemployment Insurance Drug Testing Rule (H.J.Res. 42 Pub. L.Tooltip Public Law (United States) 115–17 (text) (PDF)) "disapproving the DOL rule relating to drug testing of unemployment compensation applicants."

Trump also signed the DOL Employee Retirement Income Security Act ERISA Exemption for State-Run Retirement Plans Rule and the DOL ERISA Exemption for Municipality-Run Retirement Plans Rules.

On April 3, Trump signed the Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) "Volks" Rule measure (115-21 Pub. L.Tooltip Public Law (United States) 115–21 (text) (PDF)) which overturned the DOL "Clarification of Employer's Continuing Obligation to Make and Maintain an Accurate Record of Each Recordable Injury and Illness" enacted in December 2016.[505] On the same day he signed Public Law 115-22 which overturned the December 2, 2016 FCC Privacy Rule relating to "Protecting the Privacy of Customers of Broadband and Other Telecommunications Services"[10] [506][507][508][509][510] and the Fish and Wildlife Service (FWS) Wildlife Management Rule (H.J.Res. 69 Pub. L.Tooltip Public Law (United States) 115–20 (text) (PDF)) overturning DOI rule relating to "Non-Subsistence Take of Wildlife, and Public Participation and Closure Procedures, on National Wildlife Refuges in Alaska." Privacy advocates expressed concern that Internet service providers (ISPs)—including the largest ISPs, Comcast, Verizon, AT&T, Time Warner, Cox Communications, and CenturyLink Charter Communications and others—[511] will create and monetize detailed customer data such as Internet search history and without consent. Supporters included Republicans who regarded the rule as executive overreach and trade groups that represent Internet service providers.[512]

On April 13, Trump signed the law which overturned the HHS Title X Funding for Planned Parenthood Rule.[11]

Speech to a joint session of Congress edit

The 45th President of the United States, Donald Trump, gave his first public address before a joint session of the United States Congress on February 28, 2017. Trump announced the creation of the Office of Victims of Immigration Crime Engagement (VOICE).[513]

Protests edit

Protests against Donald Trump have occurred both in the United States and worldwide, following Donald Trump's 2016 presidential campaign, his electoral win, and through his inauguration.

On January 21, there were large demonstrations protesting Trump worldwide in 673 cities, with estimates for the global total at approximately five million people.[514][515] About half a million demonstrated in the Women's March on Washington (in Washington, D.C.).[515]

Day Without Immigrants 2017 and Not My Presidents Day were held on February 16 and 20, respectively. Later protests included the Tax Day March (April 15), March for Science (April 22), and People's Climate Mobilization (April 29).

Rallies edit

 
March 4 Trump support rally in Washington, D.C.

March 4 Trump rallies, organized by Trump supporters, were held throughout the United States on March 4.

Media coverage edit

On February 16, 2017, Trump held an hour-and-a-quarter-long press conference to "update the American people on the incredible progress that has been made in the last four weeks since my inauguration." CNN described it as an "animated and unorthodox" intervention in which Trump appeared to be "deeply frustrated" by the way he was being portrayed by the media. The media has often described the administration as chaotic, while Trump claimed it was "running like a fine-tuned machine".[516] Trump said that "the stock market has hit record numbers ... there has been a tremendous surge of optimism in the business world, and ... a new Rasmussen Reports' poll which put his "approval rating at 55 percent and going up".[517] Trump dismissed polls that gave lower numbers, such as those by Gallup and Pew Research Center, which reported 40% and 39%, respectively.[518] When asked by an Associated Press journalist about Trump's performance at the press conference, Trump's supporters said he came across as the "champion of Middle America ... taking on the establishment and making good on his campaign promises to put the country first."[519]

NBC News,[520] The Huffington Post/YouGov,[521] Gallup,[522] SurveyMonkey,[523] Rasmussen Reports,[524] the Associated Press/NORC,[525] Pew Research Center,[526] Quinnipiac University,[527] The Economist/YouGov,[528]The Wall Street Journal,[529] Reuters/Ipsos,[530] and ABC News/The Washington Post[531] are among the organizations undertaking opinion polls on Trump's approval ratings.

An April meeting of thirty White House staff members—including Communications Director, Mike Dubke, Jessica Ditto, and Kellyanne Conway—brainstormed on how to "repackage" the symbolic First 100 Days—which ends April 29—and to "rebrand Trump" by focusing on three main areas—prosperity, accountability and safety. The first includes "new manufacturing jobs, reduced regulations and pulling out of the Trans-Pacific Partnership trade deal", the second "swamp-draining campaign promises such as lobbying restrictions" and the third "the dramatic reduction in border crossings and the strike in Syria".[532] Politico summarized this period as "marred by legislative stumbles, legal setbacks, senior staff kneecapping one another, the resignation of his national security adviser and near-daily headlines and headaches about links to Russia."[532] CNN called it "largely win-less",[533] The Atlantic described its as a "disaster" marked by "chaos, confusion, and infighting" comparing it to Bill Clinton's in 1993.[534] The Washington Times claimed the numerous mainstream media descriptions of Trump's "worst 100 days" failed to mention the accomplishments: the TPP withdrawal, the Keystone XL and Dakota Access Pipelines approvals, the proposed "streamlined budget" with a "Reagan-era increase to national defense", immigration laws enforcement "which decreased illegal border crossing by 40 percent in his first month", and Gorsuch's "incredibly smooth" nomination to the Supreme Court, the Dow Jones 20,000-point threshold, and rebounding manufacturing and mining jobs".[535]

Sean Spicer edit

Sean Spicer was named as Trump's White House Press Secretary on December 22, 2016, and his Communications Director on December 24.[536] after the resignation of Jason Miller.[537] At his first official press conference, on January 21, Spicer criticized the media for underestimating the size of the crowds at the inauguration under Trump's direct orders.[538][539]

On February 1, Spicer held his sixth press briefing,[540] which for the first time included a number of Skype Seats as Chuck Todd had suggested on January 23.[541] Spicer fielded questions from Kim Kalunian (WPRI) in Rhode Island, Natalie Herbick (Fox 8) in Cleveland, Ohio, Lars Larson of the Lars Larson Show and Jeff Jobe of Jeff Jobe Publishing, South Central Kentucky. CBS NEWS reported that some journalists labelled their questions as "softball", others welcomed them.[542][543] Spicer had also delivered a tense five-minute post-inauguration news conference on January 21.[544] The Skype solution helped resolve a concern about moving to a larger press room.[312][542] By February 13, Jim Hoft, from Gateway Pundit and the "freshly minted White House correspondent", 28-year-old artist Lucian Wintrich, were granted White House press credentials and attended the press conference with Trump and the Canadian prime minister, Justin Trudeau.[545][546]

On February 4, Melissa McCarthy lampooned Spicer on Saturday Night Live.[547][548][549] On February 7, CNN reported that "President Donald Trump was disappointed with Spicer and with Priebus, who had recommended him.[550][551]

On February 24, journalists from The New York Times, The Los Angeles Times, CNN and Politico, The Los Angeles Times, and BuzzFeed were barred from Sean Spicer's small, off-camera press briefing or "gaggle", held in his office.[552][553] Conservative-leaning Breitbart News, One America News Network, and The Washington Times were invited along with Fox News, Reuters, Bloomberg News, CBS and Hearst Communications. Reporters from the Associated Press and Time walked out of the briefing in protest. Media outlets allowed into the gaggle shared full details of the briefing, including their audio, with the entire press corps.[553] Fox News "joined a complaint by the chair of the five-network television pool", although their journalist was not banned.[554] The White House Communications Agency (WHCA) lodged a complaint. Spicer explained that the White House is fighting against "unfair coverage".[553]

I think we're going to aggressively push back. We're just not going to sit back and let false narratives, false stories, inaccurate facts get out there.

— Sean Spicer on barring media from February 24 "gaggle"

On April 11, while defending President Trump's decision to bomb Syria, Spicer compared President Bashar al-Assad to Adolf Hitler and stated that even Hitler had not used chemical weapons on his own people during World War II, ignoring the Germany's use of gas chambers during the Holocaust. Spicer apologized on the next day, saying, "I got into a topic that I shouldn't have, and I screwed up."[555]

Kellyanne Conway edit

By February 3, televised interviews by Kellyanne Conway, Counselor to the President, were dominating the news cycle in the First 100 Days, according to the Washington Post claiming it was partly because of "misconstrued facts" and "falsehoods".[556] Examples include the February 2 interview on Hardball with Chris Matthews, where she cited a fictitious incident involving two Iraqi refugees in Kentucky in 2011, who she claimed were the masterminds behind the Bowling Green massacre, which she claimed was "brand new information" that had "very little [media] coverage".[557]

Conway promoted Ivanka Trump's business On February 9, on Fox & Friends in response to Nordstrom's decision to drop her products.[558][559] Organizations filed formal ethics complaints against Conway for violating federal law prohibiting use of a federal position "for the endorsement of any product, service or enterprise".[560] Public Citizen asked the Office of Governmental Ethics (OGE) to investigate[561] and Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington filed a similar complaint.[562][563]

Investigations into Russian interference in the election edit

Three separate investigations on Russian interference in the 2016 United States elections include those undertaken by the FBI, the Senate Intelligence Committee and the House Intelligence Committee.[564]

On March 20, in a House Intelligence Committee public hearing FBI Director James Comey confirmed that the FBI has been conducting a broad counter-intelligence investigation of Russian interference in the elections starting in July 2016, which includes investigations into possible links between Trump associates and Russia.[565] Comey stated that the FBI has no evidence that corroborates Trump's March 4 wiretapping claim.[566] On March 22, Devin Nunes, Republican chairman of the committee, held a press conference to reveal that, based on classified reports he had seen, U.S. intelligence agencies had incidentally collected communications of Trump's transition team, and that Trump associates' names were unmasked in the reports.[567][568]

The next House Intelligence Committee hearings will be closed and will include NSA Director Mike Rogers and Comey. Nunes canceled the public hearing with "former Acting Attorney General Sally Yates, former CIA Director John Brennan, and former Director of National Intelligence James Clapper".[569][570] On April 6, 2017, Nunes temporarily recused himself from the Russia investigation, as the House Ethics Committee began investigating claims that he improperly disclosed classified information. He called the allegations "entirely false". Mike Conaway (R-TX) replaced Nunes to lead the investigation.[571][572][573]

Re-election campaign edit

Trump filed a form with the Federal Election Commission declaring his eligibility to run for re-election in 2020 within hours of his taking office. The first rally paid for by the campaign[574] took place at the Melbourne Orlando International Airport near Orlando, Florida, on February 18, 2017.[575] The campaign rally was the earliest such event by any incumbent U.S. president in history.[575] During the event, Trump defended his actions as president and criticized the media.[576]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ The President's budget is formulated with the Office of Management and Budget (OMB), currently led by Mick Mulvaney. According to the rules and legislation governing the federal budget process, annual funding bills—appropriations bill—are submitted annually and have to be passed through Congress and the Senate and then signed by the President. Budget resolutions are under the jurisdiction of the United States House Committee on Appropriations and the United States Senate Committee on Appropriations

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first, days, donald, trump, presidency, chronological, listing, events, during, this, period, timeline, donald, trump, presidency, 2017, timeline, donald, trump, presidency, 2017, this, article, contain, excessive, amount, intricate, detail, that, interest, on. For a chronological listing of events during this period see Timeline of the Donald Trump presidency 2017 Q1 and Timeline of the Donald Trump presidency 2017 Q2 This article may contain an excessive amount of intricate detail that may interest only a particular audience Please help by spinning off or relocating any relevant information and removing excessive detail that may be against Wikipedia s inclusion policy January 2019 Learn how and when to remove this message The first 100 days of Donald Trump s presidency began on January 20 2017 the day Donald Trump was inaugurated as the 45th president of the United States The first 100 days of a presidential term took on symbolic significance during Franklin D Roosevelt s first term in office and the period is considered a benchmark to measure the early success of a president The 100th day of his presidency ended at noon on April 30 2017 1 source source source source source source source source Donald Trump outlines his plan for the first 100 days of his presidency on November 21 2016 Institutionally President Trump had the advantage of a Republican Party majority in the U S House of Representatives and the Senate but was unable to fulfill his major pledges in his first 100 days with some approval rating polls reporting around 40 He reversed his position on a number of issues including labeling China as a currency manipulator 2 3 NATO launching the 2017 Shayrat missile strike renomination of Janet Yellen as Chair of the Federal Reserve 2 3 and the nomination of Export Import Bank directors Trump s approval among his base was high with 96 of those who voted for him saying in an April 2017 poll that they would vote for him again 4 Near the end of the 100 days the Trump administration introduced a broad outline of a sweeping tax reform focusing on deep tax cuts Although Trump had to concede to delay funding for the U S Mexico border wall he had promised narrowly avoiding a government shutdown a few days before the end of the first 100 days 5 6 Trump signed 24 executive orders in his first 100 days 7 He signed 22 presidential memoranda 20 presidential proclamations and 28 bills 8 About a dozen of those bills roll back regulations finalized during the last months of his immediate predecessor Barack Obama s presidency using the Congressional Review Act 9 10 11 Most of the other bills are small scale measures that appoint personnel name federal facilities or modify existing programs 12 None of Trump s bills are considered to be major bills based on a longstanding political science standard for major bills 8 Presidential historian Michael Beschloss said that based on a legislative standard which is what the first 100 days has been judged on since the tenure of President Franklin D Roosevelt who enacted 76 laws in 100 days including nine that were major 7 13 14 15 Contents 1 Pledges 2 Inauguration 3 Administration and Cabinet 4 Notable non Cabinet positions 5 Domestic policy 5 1 United States Domestic Policy Council 5 2 Withdrawal of the Affordable Care Act 5 3 Immigration policy 5 3 1 Travel ban and refugee suspension 5 3 2 High profile ICE operations 5 3 3 U S Mexico border wall proposal 5 3 4 Sanctuary cities 5 4 Social policy 5 5 Suspended reduction of Federal Housing Mortgage Insurance Premium rates 5 6 Gun control 5 7 High priority infrastructure 6 Foreign policy 6 1 Defense 6 2 Trade policies 6 3 International relations 6 3 1 Australia 6 3 2 Canada 6 3 3 China 6 3 4 Egypt 6 3 5 European Union 6 3 6 Iran 6 3 7 Israel 6 3 8 Mexico 6 3 9 North Korea 6 3 10 Russia 6 3 11 Syria 6 3 12 United Kingdom 7 Government and Finance G amp F 7 1 Supreme Court nomination 7 2 Monetary policy 7 3 Small government 7 4 Economic policy of Donald Trump 7 4 1 Changes to Dodd Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act 7 5 Deregulation 7 5 1 Deregulation and corporations 7 5 1 1 Trump meets with CEOs of pharmaceutical companies 7 6 Limitations on executive agency members lobbying 7 7 Department of Justice 7 8 Voter fraud claims 7 9 2018 United States federal budget 7 10 Tax reform 8 Energy environmental and science policy 8 1 Climate change 8 2 Dakota Access and Keystone XL pipelines 8 3 Deregulation on environmental policies and programs 9 Acts of the 115th United States Congress 9 1 Congressional Review Act 10 Speech to a joint session of Congress 11 Protests 12 Rallies 13 Media coverage 13 1 Sean Spicer 13 2 Kellyanne Conway 14 Investigations into Russian interference in the election 15 Re election campaign 16 See also 17 Notes 18 References 19 External linksPledges editTrump pledged to do the following in his first 100 days 16 17 18 Appoint judges who will uphold the Constitution and defend the Second Amendment Construct a wall on the southern U S border and limit illegal immigration to give unemployed Americans an opportunity to fill good paying jobs Re assess trade agreements with other nations and crack down on companies that send jobs overseas nbsp The Affordable Care Act or Obamacare Repeal and replace the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act commonly called the Affordable Care Act or Obamacare Remove federal restrictions on energy production Push for an amendment to the United States Constitution imposing term limits on Congress 19 20 Eliminate gun free zones 21 Formulate a rule on regulations that for every one new regulation two old regulations must be eliminated 22 Instruct the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff to develop a comprehensive plan to protect America s vital infrastructure from cyberattacks and all other form of attacks 22 Label China a currency manipulator 23 24 Enforce rules and regulations for China s unfair subsidy behavior Instruct the U S trade representative to bring trade cases against China both in U S and at the WTO 24 25 Use every lawful presidential power to remedy trade disputes including the application of 45 tariffs consistent with Section 201 and 301 of the Trade Act of 1974 and Section 232 of the Trade Expansion Act of 1962 to stop China s illegal activities including its theft of American trade secrets 25 26 Inauguration editMain article Inauguration of Donald Trump The first 100 days of the Presidency of Donald Trump began during the inauguration of Donald Trump with the conversion of Whitehouse gov from the Obama Administration version to the Trump Administration version at 12 00 pm on January 20 2017 This was the third presidential online portal transition and the first to transition social media accounts such as Twitter 27 As Trump took the oath of office the official POTUS Twitter account switched to President Trump with Barack Obama s previous tweets archived under POTUS44 28 Administration and Cabinet editMain article Cabinet of Donald Trump On February 8 when Trump formally announced his 24 member cabinet the largest cabinet of any President so far fewer cabinet nominees had been confirmed than any other president except George Washington by the same length of time into his presidency 29 30 31 Trump s reorganization of the cabinet removed the Chair of the Council of Economic Advisers that President Obama had added in 2009 The Director of National Intelligence and Director of the CIA were elevated to cabinet level 32 During the transition period Trump had named a full slate of Cabinet and Cabinet level nominees all of which require Senate confirmation except for White House Chief of Staff and the vice presidency 33 By April 29 almost all of his nominated cabinet members had been confirmed including Secretaries of State Rex Tillerson Treasury Steven Mnuchin Defense James Mattis Justice Jeff Sessions the Interior Ryan Zinke Secretary of Agriculture Sonny Perdue Commerce Wilbur Ross Secretary of Labor Alex Acosta Health and Human Services HHS Tom Price Housing and Urban Development HUD Ben Carson Transportation Elaine Chao Energy Rick Perry Education Betsy DeVos Veterans Affairs David Shulkin Homeland Security John Kelly Director of the Central Intelligence Agency CIA Mike Pompeo UN Ambassador Nikki R Haley Environmental Protection Agency EPA Scott Pruitt Small Business Administration Linda McMahon Management and Budget OMB Mick Mulvaney and Director of National Intelligence Dan Coats Only two were awaiting confirmation Trade Representative Robert Lighthizer and Council of Economic Advisers CEA Kevin Hassett 34 James Mattis was confirmed on January 20 as Secretary of Defense by a vote of 98 1 Mattis had previously received a waiver of the National Security Act of 1947 which requires a seven year waiting period before retired military personnel can assume the role of Secretary of Defense 35 John Kelly was confirmed as United States Secretary of Homeland Security on the first day by a vote of 88 11 36 Former ExxonMobil CEO Rex Tillerson was sworn in as Secretary of State by Vice President Mike Pence on February 1 37 38 Trump nominated Tillerson for the position as top U S diplomat the equivalent of a foreign minister on December 13 2016 39 He was approved by the Senate Foreign Relations Committee on January 23 2017 40 and by the full Senate in a 56 43 vote 37 38 Nikki Haley was confirmed as UN Ambassador with a Senate vote of 96 to 4 41 On January 26 2017 when Tillerson visited the United States State Department Undersecretaries Joyce Anne Barr Patrick F Kennedy Michele Bond and Gentry O Smith all simultaneously resigned from the department Former State Department chief of staff David Wade called the resignations the single biggest simultaneous departure of institutional memory that anyone can remember 42 The Trump administration told CNN the officials had been fired 43 and the Chicago Tribune reported that several senior state department career diplomats left the State Department claiming they had been willing to remain at their posts but had no expectation of staying 44 On February 10 Tom Price was confirmed as Secretary of Health and Human Services HHS a 1 trillion government department 45 HHS includes National Institutes of Health NIH the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the Food and Drug Administration FDA Price who is a vocal opponent of the Affordable Care Act will oversee its repeal and replacement 45 He has published articles in the small conservative medical association the Association of American Physicians and Surgeons to which he belongs that opposes mandatory vaccination and continue to argue that the vaccines causes autism 46 a discredited conspiracy theory that Trump has long espoused In response to questions from Senators at the hearing as to whether he believes autism is caused by vaccines he responded I think the science in that instance is that it does not 47 Steve Mnuchin who was nominated by Trump in November 2016 48 49 was finally confirmed on February 13 2017 as Secretary of the Treasury department 50 after lengthy confirmation hearings 51 52 53 54 On February 16 the Senate voted 54 to 46 to advance Scott Pruitt s nomination as Administrator of the Environmental Protection Agency 55 On February 16 a District Court Judge in Oklahoma Aletia Timmons ordered Pruitt to turn over thousands of emails related to his communication with the oil gas and coal industry in a case brought to court by the Center for Media and Democracy 56 Lawmakers had criticized Pruitt who sued the EPA 14 times on behalf of the State of Oklahoma 55 Trump nominated Alexander Acosta as Secretary of Labor on February 16 when his first nominee Andrew Puzder stepped down 57 under a wave of criticism for having employed an illegal immigrant as a former housekeeper for his remarks on women and employees at his restaurants and for his rancorous 1980s divorce 58 59 Notable non Cabinet positions editSee also Political appointments of Donald Trump According to a database compiled by The Washington Post in collaboration with the Partnership for Public Service as of April 27 473 of the 554 key executive branch nominations that require Presidential nomination and Senate confirmation had not yet been appointed including Cabinet secretaries deputy and assistant secretaries chief financial officers general counsel heads of agencies ambassadors and other critical leadership positions 60 Only three of the 119 Department of State executive branch positions have been filled and only one position in the Department of Defense the Secretary of Defense James Mattis has been filled out of 53 key positions Trump has not yet nominated anyone for 49 of these positions 61 62 On February 28 in an exclusive interview Tuesday with Fox amp Friends said a lot of those jobs I don t want to appoint because they re unnecessary to have You know we have so many people in government even me I look at some of the jobs and it s people over people over people I say What do all these people do You don t need all those jobs Many of those jobs I don t want to fill I say isn t that a good thing That s not a bad thing That s a good thing We re running a very good efficient government 63 Prior to taking office Trump named several important White House advisers to positions that do not require Senate confirmation including Stephen K Bannon as his senior counselor and chief West Wing strategist and Reince Priebus as Chief of Staff with a mission as equal partners to transform the federal government 64 Other important advisers outside of the Cabinet include Counselor to the President Kellyanne Conway Senior Advisor National Security Advisor Michael Flynn replaced by H R McMaster and National Trade Council Director Peter Navarro 65 Homeland Security Adviser Thomas P Bossert Regulatory Czar Carl Icahn White House Counsel Donald F Don McGahn II and Press Secretary Sean Spicer Michael T Flynn served as Trump s National Security Advisor from January 20 until his resignation on February 13 2017 66 67 He set a record for the shortest tenure as National Security Advisor in American history 68 The Justice Department warned the Trump administration that Flynn who had a well established history with Russia 69 may have been vulnerable to blackmail by Moscow Flynn had mischaracterized his communications with Russian Ambassador Sergey Kislyak to Vice President Mike Pence regarding U S sanctions on Russia 68 69 Flynn s phone calls had been recorded by a government wiretap and several days after Flynn was named as Trump s Advisor Sally Yates who was then acting attorney general warned the White House that Flynn was susceptible to blackmail by the Russians because he had misled Mr Pence and other officials According to a February 14 article by The New York Times it was unclear why the White House did not react to Yates warning in early January There were also questions about how much was known in early January by Bannon Pence Spicer and Trump Yates was fired on January 30 in an unrelated incident 69 70 71 On February 20 2017 Trump named warrior scholar deemed an expert in counter insurgency 72 Lieutenant General H R McMaster to replace Flynn as National Security Advisor 73 74 75 Trump overruled McMaster s attempt to replace 30 year old NSC aide Ezra Cohen Watnick a Mike Flynn appointee with Linda Weissgold when Bannon and Kushner intervened on Cohen Watnick s behalf on March 11 12 76 77 Cohen Watnick gathered classified files on intelligence information on U S persons 77 On January 28 2017 Trump signed a Memorandum the Organization of the National Security Council and the Homeland Security Council 78 which restructured the Principals Committee the senior policy committee of the National Security Council assigning a permanent invitation to Steve Bannon White House Chief Strategist while at the same time withdrawing the permanent invitations of the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff and Director of National Intelligence 79 On April 5 the 75th day of Trump s presidency under guidance from Army Lieutenant General H R McMaster the National Security Advisor NSC advisor who replaced Mike Flynn Trump removed Bannon who has no security experience from the National Security Council s principals committee 80 81 Trump s 36 year old son in law Jared Kushner is Trump s Senior Advisor alongside Stephen Miller In his January interview with the Times of London Trump said that Kushner would be in charge of brokering peace in the Israeli Palestinian conflict 82 83 84 He is also a top adviser on relations with Canada China and Mexico 85 On April 3 Kushner accompanied the head of the Joint Chiefs of Staff General Joseph F Dunford Jr and Homeland Security Advisor Thomas P Bossert to meet with Iraqi Prime Minister Haider al Abadi to discuss the fight against the Islamic State and whether the United States would leave troops in Iraq afterward 85 86 Trump named Kushner as head of the White House Office of American Innovation OAI established on March 29 and mandated to use ideas from the private sector to overhaul all federal agencies and departments in order to spur job creation 87 88 89 One of the OAI s first priorities is to modernize the technology of departments such as Veterans Affairs 90 In his new position Kushner will work with Chris Christie who will chair the newly established President s Commission on Combating Drug Addiction and the Opioid Crisis in response to Trump s pledge to combat opioid abuse 90 91 92 On January 28 in his eleventh Presidential Memoranda Organization of the National Security Council and the Homeland Security Council White House Chief Strategist Steve Bannon was designated as a regular attendee to the National Security Council NSC s Principals Committee a Cabinet level senior interagency forum for considering national security issues in a departure from the previous format in which this role is usually held for generals 93 94 95 While at first there was some confusion over meeting attendees Priebus clarified on January 30 that defense officials could attend the meetings 96 97 On April 5 the 75th day of Trump s presidency under guidance from Army Lieutenant General H R McMaster the National Security Advisor NSC advisor who replaced Mike Flynn Trump removed Bannon who has no security experience from the National Security Council s principals committee 80 81 On February 2 Time published an article about Bannon as potentially the second most powerful man in the world illustrated with a cover labeling him as the Great Manipulator 98 99 After only a fortnight into Trump s presidency NPR described Bannon as the power behind the throne and the gray eminence behind much of what Trump was prioritizing rivalling Kushner s and Priebus roles 100 Mike Pence affirmed in a PBS NewsHour report that only Trump was in charge Bannon and Steve Miller have been called the architects of the inaugural address executive orders including the controversial travel and refugees EO 101 and presidential memoranda 100 101 In an often cited October 8 2015 lengthy profile entitled This Man Is the Most Dangerous Political Operative in America by Joshua Green a senior national correspondent for Bloomberg News Green described how Breitbart News with Bannon at its helm had championed Trump s presidential candidacy and helped coalesce a splinter faction of conservatives who were irate over the way in which Fox News had treated Trump 102 Green quoted then Senator Jeff Sessions as an admirer of Breitbart which was extraordinarily influential with many radio hosts reading Breitbart every day 102 Trump cited Breitbart News to vindicate his claims 103 Stephen Miller Trump s Senior Advisor was Jeff Sessions communications director when he served as Senator for Alabama 104 105 106 Thirty one year old Miller Bannon and Andrew Bremberg sent over 200 executive orders to federal agencies for review before January 20 107 Miller has been an architect behind the inaugural address and the most contentious executive orders 107 including Executive Order 13769 108 109 In a February 12 interview with ABC News anchor George Stephanopoulos when asked to provide evidence for Trump s unfounded allegations 110 where former Senator Kelly Ayotte lost her bid for election and Trump narrowly lost to Clinton in 2016 111 112 Miller suggested Stephanopoulos interview Kansas Senator Kris Kobach who relied upon a 2012 Pew Research Center study 113 in his voter fraud claims 110 114 The day before the interview a Federal Election Commission Commissioner called on Trump to provide evidence of what would constitute thousands of felony criminal offenses under New Hampshire law 112 Gary Cohn the former Goldman Sachs investment banker and executive took office on January 20 as Trump s Director of the National Economic Council NEC a position which did not require Congressional confirmation 52 115 By February 11 2017 The Wall Street Journal described Cohn as an economic policy powerhouse in Trump s administration and The New York Times called him Trump s go to figure on matters related to jobs business and growth 116 While the confirmation of Trump s December 12 2016 nominee for Secretary of Treasury Steven Mnuchin was delayed until February 13 by Congressional hearings Cohn filled in the personnel vacuum and pushed ahead on taxes infrastructure financial regulation and replacing health care law 51 52 In November Trump considered offering Cohn the position as Secretary of Treasury 52 If Cohn had stayed at Goldman Sachs some believed he would have become CEO when Lloyd Blankfein vacated that office and his 285 million severance package raised eyebrows according to CNN 52 117 Bannon and Cohn disagree on the border adjustment tax 118 the centerpiece of Paul Ryan s controversial tax reforms presented on February 17 119 120 which includes a 20 import tax export subsidies and a 15 reduction in corporate tax rates that would among other things pay for the Mexican wall 121 which according to a The Washington Post study would cost 25 billion 122 and which Trump stated would cost 12 billion 123 Domestic policy editUnited States Domestic Policy Council edit Main article United States Domestic Policy Council The Domestic Policy Council DPC consists of Trump and Andrew Bremberg as Directors with Paul Winfree as Deputy Assistant Council attendees include Mike Pence Jeff Sessions Tom Price John F Kelly David Shulkin Ryan Zinke Betsy DeVos Ben Carson Elaine Chao Wilbur Ross Rick Perry Steven Mnuchin and when appointed the Secretary of Labor and the Secretary of Agriculture Additional attendees include Scott Pruitt Mick Mulvaney Director of the Office of Management and Budget Gary Cohn and when appointed the Chair of the Council of Economic Advisers and the Director of the Office of National Drug Control Policy 124 The Congressional Research Service describes DPC s role as analyses of domestic policies and social programs including education labor and worker safety health care insurance and financing health services and research aging policy studies Social Security pensions and disability insurance immigration homeland security domestic intelligence and criminal justice and welfare nutrition and housing programs Withdrawal of the Affordable Care Act edit Within the first hours of Trump s presidency he signed his first executive order Minimizing the Economic Burden of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act Pending Repeal EO 13765 to fulfill part of his pledge to repeal the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act ACA 125 which was part of a series of steps taken prior to 2017 to repeal and defund the ACA 126 including most recently the FY2017 budget resolution S Con Res 3 that contained language allowing the repeal of ACA through the budget reconciliation process 127 128 A CBO report estimated 18 million people would lose their insurance and premiums would rise by 20 to 25 in the first year after repealing Obamacare Uninsured could reach 32 million by 2026 while premiums could double 129 The order states what Mr Trump made clear during his campaign that it is his administration s policy to seek the prompt repeal of Obamacare 130 During his Fox News interview with Bill O Reilly airing before the Super Bowl Trump announced that the timeline for replacing Obamacare had to be extended and that a replacement would probably not be ready until 2018 Republicans are limited as to how much of ACA they can undo as they do not have a 60 vote majority in the Senate They also must balance the interests of insurers and medical providers 131 According to the March 13 2017 report by the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office and staff of the Joint Committee on Taxation JCT on the budgetary impact of the Republican bill to repeal and replace ACA over the coming decade there would be a 337 billion reduction in the federal deficit and an estimated loss of coverage to 24 million more Americans 132 133 134 The Republican health care plan was unveiled on March 6 and faced opposition from both moderate and conservative Republicans such as the House Freedom Caucus 135 136 The American Health Care Act of 2017 AHCA a bill to repeal and replace the ACA was withdrawn in Congress on March 24 2017 due to lack of support from within the Republican caucus 135 136 137 Immigration policy edit Main article Immigration policy of Donald Trump In his first 100 days President Trump signed executive orders to set in motion travel bans and restrictions on refugees and immigrants from Muslim majority countries increased immigration enforcement including deportations and expanded efforts to prevent illegal entry into the United States by building a wall along the Mexico United States border While the numbers of people deported were very similar to those in 2016 the categories of people targeted for deportations was broadened during this period which meant that many more people are at a heightened risk of deportation Secretary Kelly clarified that Immigration and Customs Enforcement ICE will no longer exempt classes or categories of removable aliens from potential enforcement By April 3 according to ICE there had been 35 604 removals in January and February 2017 compared to 35 255 in the same period in 2016 But the tough rhetoric and some high profile Ice operations widely cited in the media resulted in widespread fear and panic within immigrant communities 138 In an AP April 20 interview Trump said that The dreamers should rest easy 139 There are 800 000 young people protected by Obama s Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals DREAMERS who came to the U S as children and are living there illegally Some of these dreamers in interviews with The Associated Press on April 21 said they were not comforted by Trump s pledge particularly since the April 18 deportation of 23 year old dreamer Juan Manuel Montes 140 Trump supporters who are immigration hard liners such as NumbersUSA and Mark Krikorian of the Center for Immigration Studies feel deceived by Trump s softening stance on DREAMERs arguing that h is promise on DACA was pretty clear and unequivocal 141 Travel ban and refugee suspension edit Main articles Executive Order 13769 Reactions to Executive Order 13769 and Legal challenges to Executive Order 13769 nbsp Map of countries affected by Executive Order 13769 Collectively the order applies to over 200 million people approximate population of the seven countries while about 90 000 people from these countries currently hold a US immigrant or non immigrant visa 142 143 On January 27 at 4 42 p m EST Trump signed Executive Order 13769 144 entitled Protecting the Nation From Terrorist Attacks by Foreign Nationals which temporarily suspends the U S Refugee Admissions Program USRAP for 120 days and denies entry to citizens of Iraq Iran Libya Somalia Sudan Syria and Yemen for 90 days The suspension for Syrian refugees is for an indefinite period of time 145 146 The Economist described the order as drafted in secret enacted in haste and unlikely to fulfill its declared aim of sparing America from terrorism with Republican allies lamenting that a fine popular policy was marred by its execution 147 Notably Saudi Arabia was not on the list though most of the 9 11 hijackers were from there 148 See Provisions of Order 13769 On February 4 the U S Department of Homeland Security and the State Department suspended all actions to implement the week old EO 149 in response to the February 3 ruling by federal judge James Robart which blocked the EO 149 150 151 According to CNN and the Los Angeles Times the architects behind the order were Stephen Miller and Steve Bannon 109 152 White House officials deny that it was written without input from the U S Department of Justice s Office of Legal Counsel OLC 153 It was argued that these seven countries ranked among the lowest 15 of the 104 countries evaluated by the Henley amp Partners Visa Restrictions Index in 2016 based on the number of countries that their citizens can travel to visa free For example Germany ranks the highest at 177 points Afghanistan the lowest of all 104 at 25 154 3 The order also calls for an expedited completion and implementation of the Biometric Entry Exit Tracking System for all travelers coming into the United States 145 155 The first legal challenge against the EO was filed on January 28 and within two days there were dozens of ongoing lawsuits in the United States federal courts 156 By February 3 federal judge James Robart temporarily blocked the week old EO which opened American airports to visa holders from the seven targeted countries 150 151 At the international level legal concerns have been raised by the UN Zeid Ra ad al Hussein who claimed that discrimination on nationality alone is forbidden under human rights law 157 158 On January 30 in a telephone call to Trump German Chancellor Angela Merkel explained that his EO ran counter to the duties of all signatory states to the Geneva Refugee Convention to take in war refugees on humanitarian grounds 159 Thousands protested at airports and other locations throughout the United States 160 Critics of the ban include most Democrats and several top Republican Congressmen 161 former President Obama 162 the Council on American Islamic Relations 163 over a dozen state attorneys general 164 thousands of academics 165 Nobel laureates 165 166 technology companies 167 Iran France Germany 168 169 and 800 000 petitioners in Britain 170 Supporters of the ban include 82 of GOP voters 171 172 Paul Ryan Bob Goodlatte Czech President Milos Zeman 169 173 and members of the European far right 174 175 According to an IPSOS online poll conducted on January 31 in response to the question Do you agree or disagree with the Executive Order that President Trump signed blocking refugees and banning people from seven Muslim majority countries from entering the U S 48 of the 1 201 Americans polled agreed with the statement 23 of the 453 Democrats 82 of the 478 Republicans and 44 of the Independents polled 171 On the evening of January 30 Trump replaced acting Attorney General Sally Yates with Dana Boente 176 Spicer s statement described Yates as an Obama administration appointee who had betrayed the Department of Justice by refusing to enforce a legal order In the Senate Chuck Schumer called her firing a Monday Night Massacre in reference to Nixon s firing of his attorney general referred to as the Saturday Night Massacre during Watergate 177 Trump also replaced DHS s ICE Chief Daniel Ragsdale with Thomas Homan as Acting Director in the evening of January 30 178 179 In a live interview with Chris Wallace on January 29 Fox News Sunday Kellyanne Conway justified the list of seven countries by claiming that the countries were originally identified as a threat in the Terrorist Prevention Act passed by Congress in 2015 180 HUD s Visa Waiver Program Improvement and Terrorist Travel Prevention Act of 2015 was extended amid some controversy in February 2016 when it revoked the privilege of traveling to the States without a visa to people who had recently traveled to Iraq Syria Iran or Sudan as they were considered high risk 181 182 A spokesman for former president Obama issued a statement stating The president Obama fundamentally disagrees with the notion of discriminating against individuals because of their faith or religion In his final press statement as president Obama said There s a difference between the normal functioning of politics and certain issues or certain moments where I think our core values may be at stake and stated his intention to speak out if a situation is serious enough 162 Obama encouraged Americans to protest the issue 183 In response to a temporary restraining order TRO issued in the case of State of Washington v Trump the Department of Homeland Security said on February 4 that it had stopped enforcing the portions of the executive order affected by the judgment while the State Department activated visas that had been previously suspended The restraining order was upheld by the United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit on February 9 2017 184 On March 15 a United States Federal Judge Derrick Watson of the District Court of Hawaii issued a 43 page ruling which blocked Trump s revised March 6 executive order 13780 on the grounds that it violated the First Amendment s Establishment Clause by disfavoring a particular religion 185 The temporary restraining order was converted to a preliminary injunction by Judge Watson on March 29 186 On an April 18 airing of the Mark Levin Show Jeff Sessions commented We are confident that the President will prevail on appeal and particularly in the Supreme Court if not the Ninth Circuit So this is a huge matter I really am amazed that a judge sitting on an island in the Pacific can issue an order that stops the President of the United States from what appears to be clearly his statutory and Constitutional power 187 High profile ICE operations edit On February 8 2017 Immigration and Customs Enforcement ICE agents arrested 35 year old Guadalupe Garcia de Rayos when she attended her required annual review at the ICE office in Phoenix and deported her to Mexico on the next day based on a removal order issued in 2013 by the Executive Office for Immigration Review 188 189 Immigrant advocates believe that she is the first 190 191 to be deported after the EO was signed and that her deportation reflects the severity of the crackdown on illegal immigration 192 ICE officials said that her case went through multiple reviews in the immigration court system and that the judges held she did not have a legal basis to remain in the US 193 In 2008 she was working at an amusement park in Mesa Arizona when then Sheriff Joe Arpaio ordered a raid that resulted in her arrest and felony identity theft conviction for possessing a false Social Security number Arpaio was a subject of several controversies during his tenure as sheriff In 2015 the U S Department of Justice partially settled a lawsuit filed against Arpaio for unlawful discriminatory police conduct alleging that Arpaio had overseen the worst pattern of racial profiling in U S history 194 195 ICE officials in Los Angeles released a report on February 10 2017 that about 160 foreign nationals were arrested in a five day operation Of those 150 had criminal histories and of the remaining arrests five had final orders of removal or were previously deported Ninety five percent were male 196 Under Trump s EO the definition of criminal is much more sweeping than Obama s which prioritized expulsion of undocumented immigrants who threatened public safety or national security had ties to criminal gang activity committed serious felony offenses or were habitual misdemeanor criminal offenders and a single immigration officer decides 193 On the morning of February 14 ICE officials entered the Des Moines Washington family home of 23 year old Daniel Ramirez Medina on an arrest warrant for Ramirez father who was taken into custody 197 Ramirez who has no criminal record entered the United States illegally as a child and was later able to get a legal work permit through the 2012 Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals DACA policy was placed in detention in the Northwest Detention Center 197 Tacoma Washington According to ICE Ramirez was detained based on his admitted gang affiliation and risk to public safety 197 According to Ramirez s lawyer Ramirez unequivocally denies these allegations and claimed ICE agents repeatedly pressured Ramirez to falsely admit gang affiliation 197 198 The case raises questions about what it could mean for Dreamers undocumented immigrants who were brought to the United States as children 197 U S Mexico border wall proposal edit Main articles Mexico United States relations Trump administration Mexico United States barrier Trump administration and Executive Order 13767 nbsp President Trump signs an executive order at a ceremony at DHS headquarters While visiting the Department of Homeland Security DHS on January 25 President Trump signed his third executive order Border Security and Immigration Enforcement Improvements EO 13767 199 200 under the INA the Secure Fence Act and the IIRIRA for the construction of a Mexican border wall 201 to deter illegal migration and smuggling of illegal products 202 The existing Mexico United States barrier is not one continuous structure but a series of physical walls and physical and virtual fences monitored by the United States Border Patrol 201 203 The proposed wall which would be a contiguous physical wall or other similarly secure contiguous and impassable physical barrier 200 along the entire length of the border which Trump estimated in 2016 would cost 10 billion to 12 billion 204 and by January 27 was estimated to be 20 billion 205 to be initially paid by Congress Trump plans on eventually negotiating a reimbursement from the Mexican government 202 While the Executive Order entitled Border Security and Immigration Enforcement Improvements contains no information of payment it requests federal agency reports by late March 2017 which identify and quantify all sources of direct and indirect Federal aid or assistance to the Government of Mexico on an annual basis over the past five years including all bilateral and multilateral development aid economic assistance humanitarian aid and military aid 200 On January 27 Forbes cautioned that the 20 Mexican Import Tariff on all imported goods announced by Spicer to pay for the 1 933 mile 3 111 km frontier wall would be paid by Americans 205 GOP donors Brothers Charles and David Koch and their advocacy group Americans For Prosperity oppose Paul Ryan s Buy American Tax Plan which they claim would add a whopping tax hike of more than 1 trillion on American families and small businesses over 10 years The import tariff would raise prices at Wal Mart for example directly impacting lower income families 206 The Washington Post reported on April 25 that Trump had agreed to delaying funding for the construction of the wall until September to avoid a government shutdown 5 Sanctuary cities edit Main article Executive Order 13768 On January 25 Trump signed an executive order Enhancing Public Safety in the Interior of the United States to the Secretary of Homeland Security and the Attorney General and their departments and agencies to increase the enforcement of immigration laws 207 which included the hiring of 10 000 additional immigration officers His order requires the cooperation of state and local authorities The order states sanctuary jurisdictions including sanctuary cities who refuse to comply will not be eligible to receive Federal grants except as deemed necessary for law enforcement purposes by the Attorney General or the Secretary 207 Some officials claim that the U S Constitution bars the federal government from commandeering state officials or using federal funds to coerce states into doing the bidding of Washington 208 Mayors of New York Boston Denver Los Angeles San Francisco and Seattle have expressed concerns about the Order and do not want to change the way their cities treat immigrants 209 210 Jeff Sessions is considered to be an inspiration for Trump s anti immigration policies 211 On August 31 2016 Trump laid out a 10 step plan as part of his immigration policy where he reiterated that all illegal immigrants are subject to deportation with priority given to illegal immigrants who have committed significant crimes and those who have overstayed visas He noted that all those seeking legalization would have to go home and re enter the country legally 212 213 214 215 216 In a meeting with concerned mayors Sessions explained that the Executive Order merely directs cities to enforce the preexisting thirty year old law 8 U S C 1373 which means that there is no sanctuary city debate 217 On April 25 U S District Judge William Orrick III sided with San Francisco and Santa Clara in their lawsuit against the Trump administration issuing a temporary injunction effectively blocking the order targeting so called sanctuary cities Justice Orrick said that the president has no authority to attach new conditions to federal spending 218 Judge Orrick issued a nationwide permanent injunction on November 20 2017 declaring that section 9 a of Executive Order 13768 was unconstitutional on its face 219 220 and violates the separation of powers doctrine and deprives the plaintiffs of their Tenth and Fifth Amendment rights 221 Social policy edit Main article Social policy of Donald Trump Trump s appointment of a conservative justice Neil Gorsuch his reinstatement of the Mexico City Policy and his signing H J Res 43 HHS Title X Funding for Planned Parenthood Rule 10 are in keeping with his pro life policy 222 On January 23 Trump signed a Presidential Memorandum on the Mexico City Policy regarding federal funding to foreign NGOs 223 224 225 This is a key point in the abortion debate as foreign NGOs that receive US federal funding will no longer be able to offer promote or perform abortion services as part of family planning in their own countries using non U S government funds 226 227 Forbes claimed this could potentially affect 9 5 billion in programs that reach 225 million women globally 228 On April 13 Trump quietly signed H J Res 43 HHS Title X Funding for Planned Parenthood Rule 10 reversing Obama s December 2016 regulation which had mandated that Title X recipients like states local and state governments distribute federal funds for services related to contraception sexually transmitted infections fertility pregnancy care and breast and cervical cancer screening to qualified health providers regardless of whether they also perform abortions 229 Bloomberg noted that although this was one of the few opportunities Trump has had in his first 100 days to enact legislation he signed this bill in private 230 The Obama rule never came into effect as it was blocked by a federal judge 231 Republicans want to cut off federal funding from health care organizations such as Planned Parenthood that perform abortions Proponents of the bill claim it supports states rights over federalist rights 230 The bill was passed under the procedures of the Congressional Review Act In the Senate Vice President Pence cast a tie breaking vote 11 232 This will be an issue at the end of the first 100 days as Congress tries to avoid a government shutdown 230 In Fiscal Year 2014 Planned Parenthood clinics received 20 5 million of the 252 6 million distributed under the Title X Family Planning grant program 230 The proposed American Health Care Act announced by Congressional Republicans in March 2017 would have made Planned Parenthood ineligible for Medicaid reimbursements or federal family planning grants 233 Suspended reduction of Federal Housing Mortgage Insurance Premium rates edit Within the first hours of Trump s presidency he suspended indefinitely the reduced Mortgage Insurance Premiums for loans with Closing Disbursement date on or after January 27 2017 known as the Federal Housing Administration s FHA Annual Mortgage Insurance Premium MIP Rates managed under the United States Department of Housing and Urban Development HUD It is effective immediately 125 234 Obama s rate cut would have lowered borrowing costs for first time and low income house buyers 235 Gun control edit See also Repeal of the Implementation of the NICS Improvement Amendments Act of 2007 In February 2017 the Trump administration signed into law a bill that rolled back a regulation implemented by the Obama administration 236 which would have prohibited approximately 75 000 individuals who were receiving Social Security disability and had representative payees from owning guns 237 238 239 The bill was supported by the ACLU 240 the National Association for Mental Health The American Association of People with Disabilities and the National Council on Disability 241 the Consortium for Citizens with Disabilities 242 as well as other disability rights advocates 243 The initial regulation was supported by the Brady Campaign to Stop Gun Violence 244 Moms Demand Action Against Gun Violence 245 Democratic gun control advocates 246 and some mental health experts 245 High priority infrastructure edit Main article Executive Order 13766 On January 24 Trump signed his second Executive Order entitled Expediting Environmental Reviews and Approvals for High Priority Infrastructure Projects 247 EO 13766 248 249 250 which is part of a series of five executive orders to date 251 This Order was part of a series designed to speed environmental permitting and reviews as major infrastructure projects trigger an array of overlapping environmental and natural resource laws and requirements 249 On April 19 Trump signed a bill that extended the VA s Choice beyond August The 2014 Veterans Access to Care through Choice Accountability and Transparency Act was enacted in by the Obama administration in response to the Veterans Health Administration scandal of 2014 252 Foreign policy editMain article Foreign policy of the Donald Trump administration The main group advising the President on foreign affairs and national security is the National Security Council NSC 253 which coordinates national agencies such as the secretaries of defense and state the secretaries of the army navy and air force On April 10 The Wall Street Journal described Trump s foreign policy as moving away from the America First isolationist policies towards more mainstream and conventional tendencies under the more stabilizing influence of Tillerson Mattis McMaster Ross and Kushner 254 On the first day of Trump s presidency the White House website had posted a 220 word description of its foreign policy It was protectionist with a focus on America First as was his inaugural address His three top priorities were to defeat ISIS to rebuild the military and to embrace diplomacy 255 Defense edit At the time Trump took office U S military spending had reached its highest peak ever 255 Trump requested 30 billion for FY 2017 which ends in September and an increase of 54 billion to Defense Department for FY 2018 The 639 billion in FY2018 would result in deep cuts to many other departments including the State Department the diplomatic arm of the administration 256 After Trump s April 12 first face to face meeting with NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg Trump announced that he had changed views about NATO Trump had previously complained that NATO was obsolete as it did not fight terrorism 257 On March 18 Trump called on NATO s member nations to contribute more to NATO 258 After the White House meeting Trump realized that NATO has been engaged in combating groups like ISIS Trump will maintain the US commitment to NATO while reiterating its member nations must step up their military financing 257 259 260 On January 29 Trump authorized the first military operation of his Presidency a raid by US commandos on Al Qaeda in Yakla Baida in Yemen 261 At least 14 jihadists were killed in the raid 262 as well as 10 civilians including children 263 The raid also resulted in the death of Chief Petty Officer William Owens a 36 year old Virginia based Navy SEAL the first U S combat casualty in Trump s presidency 264 According to The New York Times Owen s death came after a chain of mishaps and misjudgments that plunged the elite commandos into a ferocious 50 minute firefight that also left three others wounded and a 75 million aircraft deliberately destroyed 261 On April 6 2017 Trump ordered a missile strike on Shayrat Air Base near Homs in Syria 59 Tomahawk missiles were launched from the USS Ross DDG 71 and USS Porter DDG 78 from the Mediterranean Sea 265 266 267 On April 8 four days after North Korea had test fired a ballistic missile an announcement by the United States Pacific Command PACOM commander was posted via U S Third Fleet Public Affairs stating that PACOM had ordered the USS Carl Vinson supercarrier to sail north and report on station in the Western Pacific Ocean 268 It was a premature announcement that led to a glitch ridden sequence of events a result of confusion created by a miscommunication between the Pentagon and the White House 269 On April 8 270 and April 9 media outlets such as Fox News RT CNN USA Today 271 BBC 272 273 and others had published the erroneous announcement that warships were heading to the Korean Peninsula within the context of escalating US North Korean tensions In an interview with FOX Business Network s Maria Bartiromo that aired on April 12 President Trump warned We are sending an armada Very powerful We have submarines Very powerful Far more powerful than the aircraft carrier That I can tell you 274 By April 17 North Korea s deputy United Nations ambassador accused the United States of turning the Korean peninsula into the world s biggest hotspot and the North Korean government stated its readiness to declare war on the United States if North Korean forces were to be attacked 275 On April 17 the Defense News broke the story that the Carl Vinson and its escorts were 3 500 miles from Korea engaged in scheduled joint Royal Australian Navy exercises in the Indian Ocean 269 276 277 According to Dana White the Pentagon s chief spokeswoman the Carl Vinson was heading north on April 18 269 The Wall Street Journal reported on April 19 that the incident sparked both criticism and ridicule as some felt duped by Trump In the article Hong Joon pyo a candidate in the 2017 South Korean presidential election was quoted as saying What President Donald Trump said was important for the national security of South Korea If that was a lie then during Trump s term South Korea will not trust whatever Trump says 278 On April 13 the United States dropped a mother of all bombs MOAB in the Nangarhar Province Afghanistan 279 the first use of the bomb on the battlefield 280 On April 8 Staff Sgt Mark De Alencar was killed during an operation against ISIS in Nangarhar Province 281 282 283 The most consequential shift in Trump s defense policy was the April 6 cruise missile launch at a Syrian airbase 284 Trade policies edit nbsp Peter Navarro Director of the White House National Trade Council addresses President Donald Trump s promises to American people workers and domestic manufacturers Declaring American Economic Independence on June 28 2016 in the Oval Office with Vice President Mike Pence and Secretary of Commerce Wilbur Ross before President Trump signs two Executive Orders regarding trade in March 2017 On January 23 Trump fulfilled a campaign pledge by signing an executive order withdrawing the United States from the Trans Pacific Partnership TPP or Trans Pacific Partnership Agreement TPPA 223 285 286 According to the BBC Trump had pledged to withdraw from the Trans Pacific Partnership TPP and he signed an executive order on the TPP his first few days 222 However the EO was largely symbolic since the deal has not been ratified by a divided US Congress 287 The Trans Pacific Partnership TPP or Trans Pacific Partnership Agreement TPPA was a trade agreement between the United States and eleven Pacific Rim nations Australia Brunei Canada Chile Japan Malaysia Mexico New Zealand Peru Singapore and Vietnam that would have created a free trade zone for about 40 percent of the world s economy 224 285 288 On April 18 2017 President Trump signed Executive Order 13788 which directed federal agencies to implement a Buy American and Hire American strategy 289 The executive order directed federal agencies to implement a new system that favored higher skilled higher paid applicants 290 291 292 The order was the first initiative in response to a key pledge made by Trump during his presidential campaign to promote Buy American Hire American 293 The EO was intended to order federal agencies to review and propose reforms to the H 1B visa system 294 Through the order Trump stated his broad policy of economic nationalism without having to go through Congress Cabinet secretaries from Departments of Labor Justice Homeland Security and State 290 would fill in the details with reports and recommendations about what the administration can legally do 295 Trump argued that the EO would end the theft of American prosperity which he said had been brought on by low wage immigrant labor 296 The OMB and Department of Commerce issued a memorandum on implementation across federal procurement and grant making activities in June 2017 297 The order was revoked by President Biden on 25 January 2021 298 On March 31 President Donald Trump signed two executive orders on trade One examines forms of trade abuse taking a country by country as well as product and industry look over 90 days at cheating law enforcement and currency misalignment by foreign countries that causes U S trade deficits President Trump said the order ensures that we fully collect all duties imposed on foreign importers that cheat the cheaters Another to strengthen anti dumping rules and countervailing duties The order directs Homeland Security Commerce and Treasury departments to ensure enforcement and those who break the rules will face severe consequences 299 300 301 Trump who had been dismissive of the Export Import Bank ExIm made an about face on April 15 by nominating Scott Garrett as head of the ExIm breaking a deadlock that had prevented the Bank from operating since 2014 302 Although Trump had privately made known that he would not side with conservative Republicans including those in his own administration who wanted to cripple the ExIm in February he did not announce it publicly until April 13 when he told The Wall Street Journal that he would fill two seats of ExIm s five seat board which would allow the Bank to make loans greater than 10 million 303 Trump had been one of ExIm s harshest critics Conservatives call it the Bank of Boeing and an epicenter of crony capitalism Its supporters such as Boeing and General Electric Co claim that it facilitates trade worth billions of dollars in exports helping hundreds of businesses 304 Prior to making the announcement Trump held two significant meetings related to ExIm an April 3 formal visit with Egyptian president Abdel Fattah el Sisi who was negotiating for billions of dollars in ExIm financing 305 and an April 11 meeting with Boeing Chief Executive Jim McNerney 302 Sisi also met with Lockheed Martin and General Electric CEOs during his visit to the U S in April 305 International relations edit Australia edit Main article Australia United States relations A February 2 report by The Washington Post claimed that US President Donald Trump berated the Australian Prime Minister Turnbull during one of Trump s first phone calls made to foreign officials Trump stated that the 2016 asylum deal was an attempt to export the next Boston bombers to the United States 306 307 The contentious deal involves a 2016 agreement between the Obama administration and Australia whereby the U S would resettle 1 250 refugees held in controversial 308 offshore immigration detention facilities Manus and Nauru islands In return Australia would resettle refugees from El Salvador Guatemala and Honduras 306 309 The full transcript of that phone conversation was leaked in August 2017 and published by the Washington Post 310 Later that day Trump explained that while he respected Australia they along with many other countries were terribly taking advantage of the United States 311 The following day Australian Ambassador to the United States Joe Hockey was sent to the White House and held meetings with White House Chief Strategist Steve Bannon and Chief of Staff Reince Priebus Spicer described the phone call as very cordial 312 The 25 minute phone call on January 28 was described as acrimonious by Reuters and Trump s worst call by far with a foreign leader by The Washington Post 309 During a joint news conference with Prime Minister Turnbull Vice President Pence who was on a 10 day four country trip in April to the Pacific Rim announced that even if the United States did not admire the agreement Trump had made it clear the United States would honour the 2016 agreement to resettle refugees 313 Turnbull responded whatever the reservations of the president are the decision speaks volumes for the commitment the integrity of President Trump and your administration sir to honour that commitment 313 The US is Australia s most important security partner while China is its most important trading partner 313 Canada edit Main article Canada United States relations nbsp Prime Minister Justin Trudeau left and President Donald Trump right meet in Washington in February 2017 Prime Minister Justin Trudeau met Trump in Washington D C in February 2017 314 Trudeau said that The last thing Canadians expect is for me to come down and lecture another country on how they choose to govern referring to Trump s refugee ban Executive Order 13769 315 The two leaders emphasized the importance of the two countries ongoing relationship with Trudeau adding that there are times when we have differed in our approaches And that s always been done firmly and respectfully 315 Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross said that It has been a bad week for U S Canada trade relations as he announced stiff tariffs up stiff tariffs of up to 24 on Canadian lumber on April 24 as dairy product trade fell through 316 The Canada United States softwood lumber dispute has been since ongoing since the 1980s making it one of the longest trade disputes between the two countries as well as one of the largest 317 Trump is under pressure to begin renegotiating NAFTA the trade deal between Canada Mexico and the US 316 On April 25 Canada s International Trade Minister Francois Philippe Champagne and soft lumber industry representatives promoted trade with China in Beijing in response to what is perceived as U S protectionist policies 318 China edit Main articles China United States relations Trump administration 2017 2021 and Foreign policy of the Donald Trump administration China The Mar a Lago summit meeting on April 6 and 7 between Trump and President Xi Jinping of China during the first 100 days of the new US administration was heralded by The Telegraph as the most significant bilateral summit in decades 319 In spite of differences regarding Taiwan the South China Sea and the most urgent issue North Korea s nuclear programme the summit between the US and Chinese presidents had both symbolic and tangible successes according to the South China Morning Post 320 During the April 7 8 visit with Chinese President Xi Jinping Trump acknowledged that international relations are much more complicated than he had imagined In regards to North Korea he had hoped to negotiate better trade deals with China in exchange for China dealing with the nuclear threat from North Korea In an interview with Wall Street Journal s Gerald F Seib Trump said After listening for 10 minutes I realized it s not so easy I felt pretty strongly that they had a tremendous power over North Korea But it s not what you would think Trump also affirmed that North Korea was the United States biggest international threat 321 The BBC reported on April 19 that China was seriously concerned about nuclear threats as tensions between North Korea and the United States escalated with a war of words 322 between North Korea s leader Kim Jong un and the Trump administration 323 324 Recent threats included Vice President Mike Pence s statement that the period of strategic patience was over and his April 19 statement that the US would meet any attack with an overwhelming response North Korea recently warned of full out nuclear war if Washington takes military action against it 322 Trump has called for China to rein in North Korea but state media outlet China Daily opined that Washington must be aware of the limitations to Beijing s abilities and refrain from assuming that the matter can be consigned entirely to Beijing alone 325 China Daily considered the U N Security Council statement adopted on April 20 condemning North Korea s recent attempted missile launch 324 as an indication that the Trump administration is considering a diplomatic solution 325 In an April 12 interview with Wall Street Journal Trump said he had changed his mind and he would not label China a currency manipulator which had been one of his 100 day pledges By April he believed that China had not been manipulating its currency for months He did not want to jeopardize talks with the Chinese on confronting the threat of North Korea 2 3 Early in Trump s presidency the world s largest financial newspaper Nikkei Asian Review had reported on February 1 that Trump had labelled China and Japan as currency manipulators 326 The Trump administration confirmed its commitment to defend Japan against China s claims to the Senkaku Islands in the East China Sea through the Treaty of Mutual Cooperation and Security between the United States and Japan during a U S Defense Secretary James Mattis s visit to Japan on February 4 327 By February 9 US Chinese relations the most important bilateral relationship had remained strained 328 329 President Xi Jinping and Trump had not spoken and this had drawn increasing scrutiny 330 Xi was concerned by the December 2 2016 phone call from Taiwan President Tsai Ing wen to Trump 331 and Trump s questioning of the One China policy 332 333 334 On February 10 Trump and Xi Jinping spoke on the phone for the first time since Donald Trump took office during which Donald Trump committed to honoring the One China policy at Xi s request 335 336 During the World Economic Forum annual meeting in Davos on January 17 20 China s President Xi Jinping as keynote speaker vigorously defended globalization in a speech that the Financial Times described as one would have expected to come from a US president Mr Xi observed that blaming economic globalisation for the world s problems is inconsistent with reality globalisation has powered global growth and facilitated movement of goods and capital advances in science technology and civilisation and interactions among people 337 338 In 2015 China became the United States largest trade partner placing Canada second 339 The Times 2017 article citing an analysis by Peterson Institute for International Economics noted that China and Mexico together account for a quarter of US trade 338 Concerns have been raised about Trump s proposed imposition of a 45 percent tariff on imports from China 340 341 342 On January 23 The U S Commerce Department announced new countervailing duties CVDs ranging from 38 61 to 65 46 percent on Chinese vehicles in the antidumping case In 2015 over 8 9 million Chinese truck and bus tires worth 1 07 billion were imported to the United States 343 At his Senate confirmation hearing as Secretary of State in mid January Rex Tillerson s statements about the South China Sea set the stage for a possible crisis between the world s two biggest economies should his comments become official American policy and put further strains on one of the world s most important bilateral relationships 344 According to an article on January 28 in the South China Morning Post an official from China s Central Military Commission s Defence Mobilisation Department ranking Chinese military official considers war between China and the United States a real possibility during Trump s term as president 345 An article in The Guardian claims The bad news is that if in the coming months or years Trump faces an ignominious end to his presidency through scandal or mismanagement a national crisis involving China or ISIS or another foreign actor could allow him to cling to power 346 Egypt edit Main article United States Egypt relations On April 3 Trump hosted a formal visit with Egyptian president Abdel Fattah el Sisi in an effort to reset relations between the two countries offering the U S government s strong backing 305 Ties between the two countries were strained since Sisi deposed Egyptian president Mohamed Morsi during the July 2013 military coup 347 348 Trump publicly stated that Sisi s autocratic leadership was fantastic 305 Sisi who is seeking billions of dollars in financing from the Export Import Bank for large investments in infrastructure investments also met with the representatives from the IMF the World Bank Lockheed Martin and General Electric 305 Trump nominated a new head of ExIm which facilitates its operation the ExIm had been hamstrung since 2014 because of opposition by Republicans 302 During his talks with Sisi in April Senate Foreign Relations Committee Chairman Bob Corker R Tenn had advocated for the release of six humanitarian workers including a U S citizen 30 year old Aya Hijazi and her husband who had been imprisoned in Egypt since May 1 2014 305 A court in Egypt dropped all charges against them on April 16 305 European Union edit Main article United States European Union relations In a 60 minute interview at Trump Tower in mid January with Michael Gove of the Times of London and Kai Diekmann of Bild Trump praised Brexit criticized NATO as obsolete and the European Union as basically a vehicle for Germany He said it was a very catastrophic mistake on Angela Merkel s part to admit a million refugees whom he refers to as illegals 82 These worrying declarations among others compelled the President of the European Council Donald Tusk to raise concerns in a letter to 27 European leaders that the Trump administration seemed to question the last 70 years of American foreign policy placing the European Union in a difficult situation 349 Iran edit Main article Iran United States relations There are no formal diplomatic relations between Iran and the United States Iranian citizens were temporary banned from entering the United States by the executive order Protecting the Nation From Foreign Terrorist Entry Into the United States Late on April 18 2017 the Trump Administration certified that Iran had continued to comply with the 2015 nuclear framework agreement 350 During his campaign Trump had denounced the agreement as the worst deal ever but was frustrated in his plans to renegotiate the nuclear deal as canceling the deal would likely cause significant problems 350 Israel edit Main article Israel United States relations Israel s prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Trump held their first official visit at the White House on February 15 At the press conference Trump urged Netanyahu to hold back on building Jewish settlements on territories occupied by Israel in 1967 for a little bit 351 According to The Economist Trump appeared to step back from the long standing bipartisan American insistence that peace can be reached only through the establishment of a sovereign Palestinian state alongside the Jewish one the two state solution 351 Trump s priority of destroying the Muslim radicals of Islamic State IS differs from Netanyahu s Israel is more concerned about containing Iran the largest power in the Shia Muslim world Given that Iran is itself fighting IS in Syria and Iraq the two goals could even be in conflict 351 In a marked change from his visit to the White House under the Obama administration Netanyahu blurred the distinction by denouncing both IS and Iran in the same attack on militant Islam and hailing Mr Trump s great courage in tackling radical Islamic terror 351 Mexico edit Main article 2017 Mexico United States diplomatic crisis Since early in Trump s presidency Mexico and United States faced a diplomatic crisis Mexican President Enrique Pena Nieto opposes Trump s approach to the renegotiation of NAFTA and the implications of Trump s Executive Order 13767 352 353 After decades of cooperation between the two nations relations between the US and Mexico are seriously weakened 354 North Korea edit Main article North Korea United States relations On February 12 North Korea tested a ballistic solid fuel missile 355 the Pukkuksong 2 which is part of a series of missile tests that have largely defined the hostile North Korea United States relations over recent years 356 According to The Economist on February 13 while Trump promised to deal with the big big problem of North Korea very strongly he has few options 355 Trump received the news of the launch during the first official visit of Japan s prime minister Shinzo Abe They were dining at Mar a Lago Trump s Florida resort 355 Russia edit Main article Russia United States relations According to a Reuters report on February 9 2017 in his first 60 minute telephone call with Putin Putin inquired about extending New START Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty a nuclear arms reduction treaty between the United States and the Russia signed in 2010 which was expected to last until 2021 357 358 and after ratification 359 360 Trump denounced the treaty claiming that it favored Russia and was one of several bad deals negotiated by the Obama administration 361 The New York Times reported that on February 14 Russia deployed a new type of fully operational ground launched intermediate range cruise missile that violates a landmark arms control treaty The Americans have changed its name from SSC X 8 to SSC 8 reflecting its status as operational not X referring to in development 362 On February 16 2017 President Trump s Secretary of Defense James Mattis declared that the United States was not currently prepared to collaborate with Russia on military matters including future anti ISIL US operations 363 On February 24 Trump risked triggering a new Cold War style arms race between Washington and Moscow In an interview with Reuters Trump said that the treaty limiting Russian and U S nuclear arsenals was a bad deal for Washington and he would put the U S nuclear arsenal at the top of the pack In response Russia s Konstantin Kosachev wrote on his Facebook page arguably Trump s most alarming statement on the subject of relations with Russia 364 Trump s campaign slogan Make America great again if that means nuclear supremacy will return the world to the worst times of the arms race in the 50s and 60s Konstantin Kosachev Chair of the Foreign Affairs Committee of the Russian Federation Council February 24 2017 Trump had promised one of the greatest military buildups in American history in a feisty campaign style speech extolling robust nationalism at the annual Conservative Political Action Conference on February 24 at National Harbor 365 366 367 Syria edit Main article Syria United States relations On April 5 2017 Trump responded to the April 4 chemical attack allegedly by Syrian Armed Forces on rebel held Khan Shaykhun in Idlib Province which enveloped men women and children in a suffocating fog of sarin gas leaving more than eighty people dead and over three hundred more injured 368 369 saying that my attitude towards Syria and Assad has changed very much 370 Both Tillerson and Nikki Haley had previously stated that the Trump administration had no intention of interfering in President Bashar Assad s leadership in the Syrian Civil War as the US focused on eliminating ISIS 371 372 373 374 United Kingdom edit Main article United Kingdom United States relations In January 2017 the Prime Minister Theresa May invited Trump to a state visit to the UK when she met Trump in Washington DC 375 376 377 The visit was planned to occur in June although it may be delayed to July to coincide with the upcoming G20 summit in Hamburg 378 Some sources have suggested that the UK government may delay the visit until after the House of Commons is in recess for the summer to avoid criticism from MPs 379 The Speaker of the House of Commons John Bercow stated on February 6 2017 that Trump would not be welcome to address parliament during any future state visit drawing applause and cheering from some Members of Parliament 380 More than 1 860 000 people signed a petition to prevent Trump from making an official state visit which states that such a visit would cause embarrassment to Her Majesty the Queen 381 382 The FCO responded to this petition by stating that HM Government recognises the strong views expressed by the many signatories of this petition but does not support this petition Lord Ricketts former Permanent Under Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs said that the unprecedented speed of May s invitation has put the Queen in a very difficult situation 383 He questioned whether Trump was specially deserving of this exceptional honour given that US presidents are usually only invited to such visits after at least a year in office 383 Writing to May opposition leader Jeremy Corbyn stated that the invite should be withdrawn until the executive orders are gone 382 It was suggested that Trump s visit would have to take place outside London after Sir Bernard Hogan Howe the chief of the Metropolitan Police said that he had concerns about the visit given the number of protests expected 384 One suggestion considered was for Trump to address a rally at the National Exhibition Centre in Birmingham 378 a city where 50 4 of voters voted to leave the EU 385 rather than London which saw 59 9 voting to remain 386 Local politicians and activists in Birmingham promised to stage protests if the visit is moved with Shabana Mahmood Labour MP for the Birmingham Ladywood constituency saying that President Trump with his hateful and divisive rhetoric policies and Muslim ban is not welcome here 387 During a March 14 Fox amp Friends interview Andrew Napolitano said Three intelligence sources have informed Fox News that President Obama went outside the chain of command using the British GCHQ to implement surveillance on Donald Trump to avoid leaving American fingerprints 388 On March 16 Press Secretary Sean Spicer repeated Napolitano s claim at a White House press briefing The following day a GCHQ spokesperson called Napolitano s claim utterly ridiculous 389 The White House denied reports that it had apologized to the British government for the accusation 390 nbsp The 2017 Women s March in ChicagoGovernment and Finance G amp F editThe G amp F Division focuses on issues related to Congress the executive and the judicial branches the budget and appropriations legislative process homeland security elections and certain financial issues such as public debt inflation savings GDP taxation and interest rates banking financial institutions insurance and securities public finance fiscal and monetary policy public debt interest rates gross domestic product inflation and savings 391 Supreme Court nomination edit Main article Neil Gorsuch Supreme Court nomination nbsp Judge Neil Gorsuch his wife Louise 392 and President Donald Trump during the announcement in the East Room of the White House On the evening of January 30 Trump announced his nomination of U S Appeals Court judge Neil Gorsuch for the Supreme Court fulfilling his campaign pledge that he would choose someone in the mold of the late Justice Antonin Scalia 393 Following the February 3 ruling by federal judge James Robart which temporarily blocked Trump s travel ban on people from seven Muslim countries Trump has been openly critical of the Federal judiciary 394 According to CNN and Washington Post on February 8 Gorsuch expressed concern that Trump s remarks on the judiciary were demoralizing and disheartening to the independence of the judiciary 395 Gorsuch was approved by the Senate Judiciary committee on April 3 396 Senate Republicans invoked the nuclear option after the April 6 filibuster that prevented cloture 397 After a year long Republican block on nominations the Senate confirmed Gorsuch s nomination with a 54 45 vote mainly along party lines 398 399 Gorsuch took office in a private ceremony on April 10 Hours after Gorsuch and four other Supreme Court conservatives justices voted on April 20 to deny a stay of execution request from eight inmates on Arkansas death row Ledell Lee was put to death with a lethal injection the first in Arkansas since 2005 400 401 Two inmates Jack Jones and Marcel Williams received lethal injections on April 24 402 Monetary policy edit On April 19 in an interview with The Wall Street Journal in a reversal of previous statements Trump said he was considering keeping Janet Yellen as chair of the Federal Reserve System which oversees the U S monetary policy 3 He explained that I do like a low interest rate policy I must be honest with you In the same interview Trump said he would not label China a currency manipulator 3 which had been one of his 100 day pledges 2 Trump expressed concerns in that interview that I think our dollar is getting too strong and partially that s my fault because people have confidence in me But that s hurting that will hurt ultimately He believes a low dollar favors the U S in international trade 3 From November 8 2016 when Trump was elected to December 30 2016 the trade weighted average of the foreign exchange value of the U S dollar TWEXB increased 4 4 percent 403 Towards the end of the first 100 days the TWEXB had dropped two percent 403 This table shows some highs and lows of the Trade Weighted U S Dollar Index Broad TWEXB from 2002 to April 2017 404 Sample of trade weighted averages of foreign exchange value USD highs lows DMY 404 February 20 2002 April 9 2008 July 23 2011 July 27 2011 March 18 2015 June 3 2015 February 17 2016 May 4 2016 26 08 2016 November 23 2016 04 01 2017 19 04 2017 129 3639 95 6084 102 1682 94 0323 117 4927 115 5347 123 7823 118 6478 120 2955 127 2899 128 5246 124 0479 Small government edit On January 23 President Trump signed an executive order that froze all federal hiring except for the military The order specified that no new positions can be created and no currently vacant positions may be filled unless an agency head believes that the position is necessary to meet national security or public safety responsibilities The order is due to expire once the head of the Office of Management and Budget Mick Mulvaney creates a long term plan to reduce the size of the Federal Government s workforce through attrition 405 On January 24 the Associated Press reported on emails from the Administration to some government agencies sent shortly after the inauguration which detailed specific prohibitions banning certain government agencies such as the Agricultural Research Service Agriculture Department from issuing press releases blog updates or posts to the agency s social media accounts 406 In what the Associated Press described as a broader communications clampdown within the executive branch the Administration instituted a media blackout 406 407 In his January 25 press briefing White House press secretary Sean Spicer claimed that the emails did not come from the Administration They haven t been directed by us to do anything That directive did not come from here 408 On January 23 in a Presidential Memorandum the president ordered a temporary government wide hiring freeze 409 410 of the civilian work force in the executive branch which is managed by the Office of Personnel Management This will prevent federal agencies except for the offices of the new presidential appointees national security the military and public safety from filling vacant positions 411 412 The Brookings Institution questioned whether this freeze would include financial regulators who exercise independence from the executive branch such as the Federal Reserve Board of Governors Fed Office of the Comptroller of the Currency OCC the Securities and Exchange Commission SEC among others 413 In a Fox News report based on statistics from the Office of Personnel Management the number of executive branch employees hasn t been this low since 1965 and has been more or less steady since 2001 411 414 Economic policy of Donald Trump edit Main article Economic policy of Donald Trump Trump s key economic policies included the dismantling of the Dodd Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act and the repeal of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act ACA 415 According to the April 28 2017 Commerce Department report in the first quarter of 2017 there was a sharp decline from the 2 1 in Q1 2016 to 0 7 in Q1 2017 representing the weakest quarterly economic growth in three years The report presents a statistical analysis of the American economy in the 2017 Q1 the gross domestic product GDP 416 In spite of the soft GDP by the end of Q1 2017 the S amp P 500 was near an all time high representing a 12 rise from the first quarter of 2016 as investor confidence remained elevated 417 based on Trump s promise to cut taxes deregulate and spend heavily on infrastructure such as roads and bridges nbsp Unemployment in the United States 2009 2016 418 419 Jobless rate was 4 5 in March 2017 418 In March 2017 the unemployment rate fell to 4 5 percent 418 420 and the Consumer Sentiment Index reached 125 6 a level of consumer confidence in the United States last seen in December 2000 421 It fell to 120 3 in April 422 Consumer confidence or soft data contrasted with real consumer spending or hard data with a big drop off in the amount Americans actually spent during Trump s first 100 days 423 Consumer confidence index 424 04 2016 05 2016 06 2016 07 2016 08 2016 09 2016 10 2016 11 2016 12 2016 01 2017 02 2017 03 2017 04 2017 94 7 92 4 97 4 96 7 101 8 103 5 100 8 109 4 113 3 111 6 116 1 124 9 120 3 Real Personal Consumption Expenditures 425 06 2009 06 2010 06 2011 06 2012 06 2013 06 2014 06 2015 06 2016 12 2016 01 2017 02 2017 9 801 1 10 021 2 10 248 3 10 390 3 10 543 8 10 851 8 11 199 2 11 522 2 11 709 4 11 684 8 11 676 1 Changes to Dodd Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act edit Main article Executive Order 13772 On February 3 after a meeting with his strategic and policy forum which included Jamie Dimon Chairman and CEO JPMorgan Chase Trump issued an Executive Order Core Principles for Regulating the United States Financial System 426 427 428 which directed the Treasury secretary to submit a report on recommended changes to bank regulations in 120 days 429 Trump wants to get banks to lend money more aggressively 430 and wants to make changes to the Dodd Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act 2010 431 which was enacted in response to the Great Recession bringing significant changes to U S financial regulation 432 We expect to be cutting a lot out of Dodd Frank Frankly I have so many people friends of mine that have nice businesses that can t borrow money They just can t get any money because the banks won t let them borrow because of rules and regulations in Dodd Frank Trump in meeting with his business advisory council February 3 In an interview on February 3 with The Wall Street Journal Trump s National Economic Council Director Gary Cohn announced the planned rollback of the fiduciary rule which stated that brokers and advisers who work with tax advantaged retirement savings must work in the best interest of their clients even at the expense of their own profits 433 Deregulation edit One of the first acts by the Trump administration was an order signed by Chief of Staff Reince Priebus on January 20 under the subject Regulatory Freeze Pending Review to all Heads of Executive Departments and Agencies ordering agencies to immediately suspend all pending regulations and to send no regulation to the Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs OFR until the Trump administration can review them except for emergency situations or urgent circumstances allowed by the Director or Acting Director Mark Sandy 434 435 436 of the Office of Management and Budget OMB 406 437 438 This was comparable to prior moves by the Obama and Bush administrations shortly after their inaugurations to revert executive orders by outgoing presidents signed in their final days in office 439 On January 30 Trump signed his seventh Executive Order Reducing Regulation and Controlling Regulatory Costs 440 Deregulation and corporations edit At a January 23 meeting with leaders of the United States largest corporations including Ford s Mark Fields Dell Technologies Michael Dell Lockheed Martin s Marillyn Hewson Under Armour s Kevin Plank Arconic s Klaus Kleinfeld Whirlpool s Jeff Fettig Johnson amp Johnson s Alex Gorsky Dow Chemical s Andrew Liveris U S Steel s Mario Longhi SpaceX s Elon Musk International Paper s Mark Sutton and Corning s Wendell Weeks promised to reward the companies who stay in the United States with aggressive cuts on U S federal regulations governing their companies by 75 percent or more 441 442 443 Trump meets with CEOs of pharmaceutical companies edit On January 31 Trump met with CEOs of pharmaceutical firms including Novartis s Joseph Jimenez who also represented the Pharmaceutical Research and Manufacturers of America the pharmaceutical industry s powerful lobbying group Merck amp Co s Kenneth Frazier Johnson amp Johnson Celgene s Robert Hugin Eli Lilly Amgen s Robert Bradway 444 Trump called for lower prices We have no choice For Medicare for Medicaid We have to get the prices way down In return he promised to boost the pharmaceutical companies competitiveness by curbing regulations from 9 000 pages to 100 pages and by lowering pharmaceutical companies tax rates Trump noted that Food and Drug Administration FDA approvals force pharmaceutical companies to spend years and billions of dollars developing drugs He promised his nomination for FDA Commissioner would oversee an FDA overhaul 445 In the listening session with pharmaceutical industry leaders Trump noted that it costs sometimes 2 5 billion on average actually to come up with a new product 15 years 2 5 billion to come up with a product where there s not even a safety problem So it s crazy I m surprised you can t get them to move faster than that 446 Trump had promised in March 2016 to reform the pharmaceutical industry including the removal of existing free market barriers to allow imported dependable safe reliable and cheaper drugs from overseas bringing more options to American consumers 447 Following Trump s press conference on January 11 Fortune claimed that the largest pharmaceutical companies had lost over 20 billion in 20 minutes 448 The Medicare Prescription Drug Improvement and Modernization Act 2003 expressly prohibited Medicare from negotiating bulk prescription drug prices and Trump had pledged to revert this Following the morning meeting with CEOs on January 31 Trump abandoned his pledge to allow Medicare negotiate bulk discounts in the price it pays for prescription drugs 449 Limitations on executive agency members lobbying edit On January 28 Trump signed an Executive Order to fulfilling his campaign pledge to limit lobbying of executive agency members 450 Department of Justice edit Main articles United States Attorney General and United States Department of Justice On February 8 Alabama Senator Jeff Sessions who was nominated by Trump in January was confirmed as United States Attorney General A G the head of the Justice Department per 28 U S C 503 He is the United States government s chief law enforcement officer and lawyer with 113 000 employees working under his leadership According to The Washington Post Sessions conservative populist views have shaped many of Trump s early policies including on immigration 451 The nomination battle was described by The New York Times as a bitter and racially charged 452 The confirmation process for Trump s nominee Senator Jeff Sessions was described as strikingly contentious by The New York Times 453 with Fox News calling it a wild night 454 and CNN calling the rare rebuke a stunning moment 455 as Senator Mitch McConnell invoked Rule XIX to silence Senator Elizabeth Warren for the rest of the hearing 454 McConnell interrupted Warren as she read several pages by Coretta Scott King and Senator Ted Kennedy regarding Session s alleged racial bias from the 500 plus page transcript submitted in 1986 that contributed to the decision by the then Republican led Judiciary Committee to reject his nomination to a federal judgeship Warren immediately live streamed her reading of the letter critical of Sessions that the widow of Martin Luther King Jr had written to Senator Strom Thurmond in 1986 456 and numerous media outlets made the full text available 455 457 Trump appointed Dana J Boente to serve as acting Attorney General until Session s Senate Confirmation 458 After firing Yates Trumped signed his eleventh Executive Order 13775 on February 9 specifically reversing the DOJ s line of succession in Obama s EO 13762 in order to appoint the United States Attorney for the Eastern District of Virginia Dana J Boente as Acting Attorney General 459 460 Trump revoked EO 13775 on March 31 with Presidential Executive Order on Providing an Order of Succession Within the Department of Justice Boente had replaced Acting Attorney General Sally Yates who was fired by Trump for ordering the Justice Department to not defend Trump s Executive Order 13769 which restricted entry to the United States 461 Yates claimed that At present I am not convinced that the defense of the executive order is consistent with these responsibilities of the Department of Justice nor am I convinced that the executive order is lawful 462 463 Voter fraud claims edit Since November 2016 and during his presidency Trump has repeated voter fraud allegations that between three and five million people voted illegally and cost him the popular vote to Hillary Clinton and also that thousands of voters were illegally bused from Massachusetts into New Hampshire where former Senator Kelly Ayotte was defeated and where Trump narrowly lost to Clinton in 2016 111 Trump had announced on January 25 that he was conducting an investigation into voter fraud He repeated unsubstantiated claims about the number of fraudulent voters and referred to VoteStand founder Gregg Phillips who could not produce any evidence of voter fraud 464 465 In January US News reported that members of Trump s cabinet and family were registered to vote in multiple states 466 On February 10 Federal Election Commission FEC Commissioner Ellen L Weintraub issued a statement calling on Trump to provide the evidence of what would constitute thousands of felony criminal offenses under New Hampshire law 112 By February 12 Stephen Miller was still unable to provide concrete evidence to support claims of voter fraud in an interview with Stephanopoulos 110 111 but he seemed to direct Stephanopoulos to the often cited 2012 Pew Research Center study 110 113 In fact the 2012 Pew report entitled Inaccurate Costly and Inefficient Evidence That America s Voter Registration System Needs an Upgrade which was based on 2008 data was about outdated voter rolls not fraudulent votes and makes no mention of noncitizens voting or registering to vote 114 The report showed that because of inefficiencies in the voter system 24 percent of eligible citizens were not able to be registered representing 51 million citizens 113 8 Problems related to voter registration often affected military personnel especially those deployed overseas and their families who were almost twice as likely to report registration problems as was the general public in 2008 113 7 In November the former director of Pew s election program explained We found millions of out of date registration records due to people moving or dying but found no evidence that voter fraud resulted 114 On January 25 Spicer confirmed in a press briefing that Trump continued to believe that millions voted illegally in the election based on studies and evidence that people have presented him 467 This included an often cited and contested 467 468 2014 Old Dominion University study entitled Do non citizens vote in U S elections 469 Using Cooperative Congressional Election Study data from 2008 and 2010 the researchers had argued that more than 14 of non citizens indicated that they were registered to vote 467 2018 United States federal budget edit Main article 2018 United States federal budget Trump submitted his first budget request which recommends funding levels for the next fiscal year 2018 covering the period from October 1 2017 to September 30 2018 to the 115th Congress 470 471 Trump s request including a 639 billion defense budget and corresponding major cuts to other federal departments 256 To avert a possible government shutdown the Trump administration face an April 28 deadline the expiration of the December 10 2016 continuing resolution H R 2028 Public Law 114 254 472 473 474 Notes 1 475 Discussion time on controversial issues such as funding for a border wall defunding Planned Parenthood 10 was limited by the two week Easter recess that began on April 7 11 The government was shutdown during the Clinton and Obama administrations as a result of clashes between Republicans in Congress and Democrats in the White House In late April 2017 Republicans have control of both Congress and the White House 476 477 A shutdown would result in government agencies locking their doors national parks refusing visitors and federal workers being told not to report to work 477 The appropriations process cannot be accomplished without consulting the Democrats unlike rolling back federal regulations with Congressional Review Acts and attempts to repeal Obamacare 477 Tax reform edit The White House memo entitled 2017 Tax Reform for Economic Growth and American Jobs was presented on April 26 478 in what The Wall Street Journal described as his finest moment in the first 100 days and a policy and political success 479 Individual reform includes reducing the 7 tax brackets to 3 tax brackets for 10 25 and 35 doubling the standard deduction providing tax relief for families with child and dependent care expenses The taxation system will be simplified to eliminate targeted tax breaks that mainly benefit the wealthiest taxpayers protect the home ownership and charitable gift tax deductions repeal the Alternative Minimum Tax repeal the death tax and repeal the 3 8 Obamacare tax that hits small businesses and investment income 478 Business reform includes 15 business tax rate territorial tax system to level the playing field for American companies one time tax on trillions of dollars held overseas and elimination of tax breaks for special interests 478 The memo did not provide legislative content but rather broad outlines that will be developed in Congress but may face some opposition from both sides 480 Energy environmental and science policy editMain article Environmental policy under the Trump administration Climate change edit Trump rescinded many Obama era regulations aimed at cutting the volume of greenhouse gas emissions which faced strong opposition and legal challenges 481 The key focus of his deregulatory efforts was the Clean Power Plan created under the Obama administration which restricted GHG emissions at coal fired plants 482 Trump proposed defunding the Clean Power Plan in his FY2018 budget and his March 28 executive order directed Environmental Protection Agency administrator Scott Pruitt to review the Clean Power Plan 483 He also lifted a 14 month old halt on new coal leases on federal lands 484 Dakota Access and Keystone XL pipelines edit On January 24 Trump signed three Presidential Memoranda regarding construction of pipelines Regarding Construction of American Pipelines was his fifth memoranda Regarding Construction of the Dakota Access Pipeline was his sixth and the seventh was Regarding Construction of the Keystone XL Pipeline These were intended to clear the way to government approval 485 of the Dakota Access and the Keystone XL pipelines 486 In a meeting with small business leaders on January 30 Trump clarified that one of the reasons for approving the pipelines was to insist that pipeline makers implement a made in America approach 487 He revealed how the federal government could exercise eminent domain strategically in the appropriation of private land to pressure pipeline makers to use American raw steel for example 487 Deregulation on environmental policies and programs edit Then White House Chief of Staff Reince Priebus signed an order on January 24 temporarily delaying the Environmental Protection Agency s EPA 30 final regulations that were pending in the Federal Register 488 until March 21 2017 489 Employees in the EPA s Office of Acquisition Management received an email within hours of President Trump s swearing in from the new EPA administration asking that all contract and grant awards be temporarily suspended effective immediately which included task orders and work assignments until further clarification 406 407 490 On February 1 the Trump administration published a Statement of Administration Policy to allow coal companies to dump mining waste in streams by nullifying the Department of the Interior regulation known as the Stream Protection Rule established in the Obama administration 491 Under the Congressional Review Act Congress passed the resolution to repeal on February 1 and the Senate also approved it on February 2 492 493 The Statement nullified the Waste Prevention Production Subject to Royalties and Resource Conservation which limited venting flaring and leaks during oil and natural gas production The Repeal of Stream Protection Rule 115 5 was signed into law by Trump on February 16 Additionally the February 1 policy statement nullified the rule on Disclosure of Payments by Resource Extraction Issuers a Securities and Exchange Commission regulation which required resource extraction issuers to report payments to governments for the commercial development of oil natural gas or minerals 491 The Repeal of the Disclosure of Payments by Resource Extraction Issuers Rule 115 4 was signed into law by Trump on February 14 2017 On March 29 2017 EPA Administrator Scott Pruitt overturned the 2015 EPA revocation and denied the 2007 administrative petition by the Natural Resources Defense Council and the Pesticide Action Network North America PANNA to ban the widely used Dow Chemical Company s chlorpyrifos 494 The eight year delay by the EPA to respond to PANNA had resulted in a court case PANNA v EPA in which EPA was ordered to respond by October 2015 EPA revoked all tolerances for the insecticide chlorpyrifos 494 495 496 and Pruitt overturned the 2015 decision 494 On March 29 2017 EPA Administrator Scott Pruitt overturned the 2015 EPA revocation and denied the administrative petition by the Natural Resources Defense Council and the Pesticide Action Network North America to ban chlorpyrifos 494 By reversing the previous administration s steps to ban one of the most widely used pesticides in the world we are returning to using sound science in decision making rather than predetermined results Statement by Scott Pruitt EPA Administrator March 29 2017 Accompanied by coal executives and coal miners Trump signed a sweeping executive order on March 28 at the EPA In his remarks he praised coal miners along with pipelines and U S manufacturing and addressed the coal miners directly Come on fellas Basically you know what this is You know what it says right You re going back to work 497 Trump instructed EPA regulators to rewrite key rules curbing U S carbon emissions and other environmental regulations 497 Acts of the 115th United States Congress editMain article List of Acts of the 115th United States Congress By April 10 Trump had signed 21 Acts of Congress into law under the 115th United States Congress laws 115 2 through 115 22 The GAO Access and Oversight Act of 2017 Pub L Tooltip Public Law United States 115 3 text PDF H R 72 was the second law Trump signed as president The bill ensures that the Government Accountability Office GAO has full access to the database National Directory of New Hires to ensure that recipients of federal means tested programs like Unemployment Insurance Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program SNAP Earned income tax credit EITC and Temporary Assistance for Needy Families TANF are eligible thereby reducing government waste and increasing accountability 498 499 Congressional Review Act edit Main article Congressional Review Act Beginning in January the Trump administration used the 1996 Congressional Review Act CRA to overturn regulations some of them major finalized during the final months of Obama s tenure By April 6 Trump had signed into law 11 resolutions of disapproval under the CRA after they were passed by the Republican majority in the House and Senate 9 10 Under the Congressional Review Act Congress can circumvent the Senate s filibuster to overturn legislation issued in the last 60 days of the previous administration 230 On February 14 the Repeal of the Disclosure of Payments by Resource Extraction Issuers Rule Pub L Tooltip Public Law United States 115 4 text PDF H J Res 41 was signed nullifying the Securities and Exchange Commission regulation known as the Disclosure of Payments by Resource Extraction Issuers rule 500 The SEC regulation was mandated by the Dodd Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act which was similar to transparency initiatives adopted by the European Union and Canada 501 Advocates argued that Disclosure of Payments rule prevented companies from bribing foreign governments and engaging in other forms of corruption Those who argued for its repeal claimed that rule had placed an excessive burden on American companies and created a competitive disadvantage 500 On February 16 Trump signed the Repeal of Stream Protection Rule H J Res 38 Pub L Tooltip Public Law United States 115 5 text PDF 491 which nullified the DOI regulation known as the Stream Protection Rule 492 493 On February 28 the Repeal of the Implementation of the NICS Improvement Amendments Act of 2007 H J Res 40 Pub L Tooltip Public Law United States 115 8 text PDF was signed into law which overturned the Social Security Administration related to the implementation of the NICS Improvement Amendments Act of 2007 which had amended the National Instant Criminal Background Check System to prohibit those with severe mental illness from possessing firearms 502 On March 27 Trump overturned the Bureau of Land Management s BLM which nullified the Waste Prevention Production Subject to Royalties and Resource Conservation also known as Methane and Waste Prevention or methane venting and flaring rule which limited venting flaring and leaks during oil and natural gas production 503 504 with Bill H J Res 44 Pub L Tooltip Public Law United States 115 11 text PDF disapproved the DOI rule relating to Bureau of Land Management regulations that established the procedures used to prepare revise or amend land use plans pursuant to the Federal Land Policy and Management Act of 1976 On the same day he signed the H J Res 37 Disapproving the rule submitted by the Department of Defense the General Services Administration and the National Aeronautics and Space Administration relating to the Federal Acquisition Regulation H J Res 37 Pub L Tooltip Public Law United States 115 11 text PDF which overturned the Federal Acquisition Regulation FAR Fair Pay and Safe Workplaces known by its opponents as the Blacklisting Rule On March 27 he also signed the ED State and Local Education Accountability Rules H J Res 57 Pub L Tooltip Public Law United States 115 13 text PDF which overruled the Department of Education rule relating to accountability and State plans under the Elementary and Secondary Education Act of 1965 and the ED Teacher Preparation Rule H J Res 58 Pub L Tooltip Public Law United States 115 14 text PDF overturning the Department of Education relating to teacher preparation issues On March 31 Trump signed the DOL Unemployment Insurance Drug Testing Rule H J Res 42 Pub L Tooltip Public Law United States 115 17 text PDF disapproving the DOL rule relating to drug testing of unemployment compensation applicants Trump also signed the DOL Employee Retirement Income Security Act ERISA Exemption for State Run Retirement Plans Rule and the DOL ERISA Exemption for Municipality Run Retirement Plans Rules On April 3 Trump signed the Occupational Safety and Health Administration OSHA Volks Rule measure 115 21 Pub L Tooltip Public Law United States 115 21 text PDF which overturned the DOL Clarification of Employer s Continuing Obligation to Make and Maintain an Accurate Record of Each Recordable Injury and Illness enacted in December 2016 505 On the same day he signed Public Law 115 22 which overturned the December 2 2016 FCC Privacy Rule relating to Protecting the Privacy of Customers of Broadband and Other Telecommunications Services 10 506 507 508 509 510 and the Fish and Wildlife Service FWS Wildlife Management Rule H J Res 69 Pub L Tooltip Public Law United States 115 20 text PDF overturning DOI rule relating to Non Subsistence Take of Wildlife and Public Participation and Closure Procedures on National Wildlife Refuges in Alaska Privacy advocates expressed concern that Internet service providers ISPs including the largest ISPs Comcast Verizon AT amp T Time Warner Cox Communications and CenturyLink Charter Communications and others 511 will create and monetize detailed customer data such as Internet search history and without consent Supporters included Republicans who regarded the rule as executive overreach and trade groups that represent Internet service providers 512 On April 13 Trump signed the law which overturned the HHS Title X Funding for Planned Parenthood Rule 11 Speech to a joint session of Congress editMain article 2017 Donald Trump speech to a joint session of Congress The 45th President of the United States Donald Trump gave his first public address before a joint session of the United States Congress on February 28 2017 Trump announced the creation of the Office of Victims of Immigration Crime Engagement VOICE 513 Protests editMain articles Protests against Donald Trump and 2017 Women s March Protests against Donald Trump have occurred both in the United States and worldwide following Donald Trump s 2016 presidential campaign his electoral win and through his inauguration On January 21 there were large demonstrations protesting Trump worldwide in 673 cities with estimates for the global total at approximately five million people 514 515 About half a million demonstrated in the Women s March on Washington in Washington D C 515 Day Without Immigrants 2017 and Not My Presidents Day were held on February 16 and 20 respectively Later protests included the Tax Day March April 15 March for Science April 22 and People s Climate Mobilization April 29 Rallies edit nbsp March 4 Trump support rally in Washington D C March 4 Trump rallies organized by Trump supporters were held throughout the United States on March 4 Media coverage editOn February 16 2017 Trump held an hour and a quarter long press conference to update the American people on the incredible progress that has been made in the last four weeks since my inauguration CNN described it as an animated and unorthodox intervention in which Trump appeared to be deeply frustrated by the way he was being portrayed by the media The media has often described the administration as chaotic while Trump claimed it was running like a fine tuned machine 516 Trump said that the stock market has hit record numbers there has been a tremendous surge of optimism in the business world and a new Rasmussen Reports poll which put his approval rating at 55 percent and going up 517 Trump dismissed polls that gave lower numbers such as those by Gallup and Pew Research Center which reported 40 and 39 respectively 518 When asked by an Associated Press journalist about Trump s performance at the press conference Trump s supporters said he came across as the champion of Middle America taking on the establishment and making good on his campaign promises to put the country first 519 NBC News 520 The Huffington Post YouGov 521 Gallup 522 SurveyMonkey 523 Rasmussen Reports 524 the Associated Press NORC 525 Pew Research Center 526 Quinnipiac University 527 The Economist YouGov 528 The Wall Street Journal 529 Reuters Ipsos 530 and ABC News The Washington Post 531 are among the organizations undertaking opinion polls on Trump s approval ratings An April meeting of thirty White House staff members including Communications Director Mike Dubke Jessica Ditto and Kellyanne Conway brainstormed on how to repackage the symbolic First 100 Days which ends April 29 and to rebrand Trump by focusing on three main areas prosperity accountability and safety The first includes new manufacturing jobs reduced regulations and pulling out of the Trans Pacific Partnership trade deal the second swamp draining campaign promises such as lobbying restrictions and the third the dramatic reduction in border crossings and the strike in Syria 532 Politico summarized this period as marred by legislative stumbles legal setbacks senior staff kneecapping one another the resignation of his national security adviser and near daily headlines and headaches about links to Russia 532 CNN called it largely win less 533 The Atlantic described its as a disaster marked by chaos confusion and infighting comparing it to Bill Clinton s in 1993 534 The Washington Times claimed the numerous mainstream media descriptions of Trump s worst 100 days failed to mention the accomplishments the TPP withdrawal the Keystone XL and Dakota Access Pipelines approvals the proposed streamlined budget with a Reagan era increase to national defense immigration laws enforcement which decreased illegal border crossing by 40 percent in his first month and Gorsuch s incredibly smooth nomination to the Supreme Court the Dow Jones 20 000 point threshold and rebounding manufacturing and mining jobs 535 Sean Spicer edit Main article Sean Spicer Sean Spicer was named as Trump s White House Press Secretary on December 22 2016 and his Communications Director on December 24 536 after the resignation of Jason Miller 537 At his first official press conference on January 21 Spicer criticized the media for underestimating the size of the crowds at the inauguration under Trump s direct orders 538 539 On February 1 Spicer held his sixth press briefing 540 which for the first time included a number of Skype Seats as Chuck Todd had suggested on January 23 541 Spicer fielded questions from Kim Kalunian WPRI in Rhode Island Natalie Herbick Fox 8 in Cleveland Ohio Lars Larson of the Lars Larson Show and Jeff Jobe of Jeff Jobe Publishing South Central Kentucky CBS NEWS reported that some journalists labelled their questions as softball others welcomed them 542 543 Spicer had also delivered a tense five minute post inauguration news conference on January 21 544 The Skype solution helped resolve a concern about moving to a larger press room 312 542 By February 13 Jim Hoft from Gateway Pundit and the freshly minted White House correspondent 28 year old artist Lucian Wintrich were granted White House press credentials and attended the press conference with Trump and the Canadian prime minister Justin Trudeau 545 546 On February 4 Melissa McCarthy lampooned Spicer on Saturday Night Live 547 548 549 On February 7 CNN reported that President Donald Trump was disappointed with Spicer and with Priebus who had recommended him 550 551 On February 24 journalists from The New York Times The Los Angeles Times CNN and Politico The Los Angeles Times and BuzzFeed were barred from Sean Spicer s small off camera press briefing or gaggle held in his office 552 553 Conservative leaning Breitbart News One America News Network and The Washington Times were invited along with Fox News Reuters Bloomberg News CBS and Hearst Communications Reporters from the Associated Press and Time walked out of the briefing in protest Media outlets allowed into the gaggle shared full details of the briefing including their audio with the entire press corps 553 Fox News joined a complaint by the chair of the five network television pool although their journalist was not banned 554 The White House Communications Agency WHCA lodged a complaint Spicer explained that the White House is fighting against unfair coverage 553 I think we re going to aggressively push back We re just not going to sit back and let false narratives false stories inaccurate facts get out there Sean Spicer on barring media from February 24 gaggle On April 11 while defending President Trump s decision to bomb Syria Spicer compared President Bashar al Assad to Adolf Hitler and stated that even Hitler had not used chemical weapons on his own people during World War II ignoring the Germany s use of gas chambers during the Holocaust Spicer apologized on the next day saying I got into a topic that I shouldn t have and I screwed up 555 Kellyanne Conway edit Main article Kellyanne Conway By February 3 televised interviews by Kellyanne Conway Counselor to the President were dominating the news cycle in the First 100 Days according to the Washington Post claiming it was partly because of misconstrued facts and falsehoods 556 Examples include the February 2 interview on Hardball with Chris Matthews where she cited a fictitious incident involving two Iraqi refugees in Kentucky in 2011 who she claimed were the masterminds behind the Bowling Green massacre which she claimed was brand new information that had very little media coverage 557 Conway promoted Ivanka Trump s business On February 9 on Fox amp Friends in response to Nordstrom s decision to drop her products 558 559 Organizations filed formal ethics complaints against Conway for violating federal law prohibiting use of a federal position for the endorsement of any product service or enterprise 560 Public Citizen asked the Office of Governmental Ethics OGE to investigate 561 and Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington filed a similar complaint 562 563 Investigations into Russian interference in the election editMain article Russian interference in the 2016 United States elections Three separate investigations on Russian interference in the 2016 United States elections include those undertaken by the FBI the Senate Intelligence Committee and the House Intelligence Committee 564 On March 20 in a House Intelligence Committee public hearing FBI Director James Comey confirmed that the FBI has been conducting a broad counter intelligence investigation of Russian interference in the elections starting in July 2016 which includes investigations into possible links between Trump associates and Russia 565 Comey stated that the FBI has no evidence that corroborates Trump s March 4 wiretapping claim 566 On March 22 Devin Nunes Republican chairman of the committee held a press conference to reveal that based on classified reports he had seen U S intelligence agencies had incidentally collected communications of Trump s transition team and that Trump associates names were unmasked in the reports 567 568 The next House Intelligence Committee hearings will be closed and will include NSA Director Mike Rogers and Comey Nunes canceled the public hearing with former Acting Attorney General Sally Yates former CIA Director John Brennan and former Director of National Intelligence James Clapper 569 570 On April 6 2017 Nunes temporarily recused himself from the Russia investigation as the House Ethics Committee began investigating claims that he improperly disclosed classified information He called the allegations entirely false Mike Conaway R TX replaced Nunes to lead the investigation 571 572 573 Re election campaign editFurther information Donald Trump 2020 presidential campaign Trump filed a form with the Federal Election Commission declaring his eligibility to run for re election in 2020 within hours of his taking office The first rally paid for by the campaign 574 took place at the Melbourne Orlando International Airport near Orlando Florida on February 18 2017 575 The campaign rally was the earliest such event by any incumbent U S president in history 575 During the event Trump defended his actions as president and criticized the media 576 See also editA Better Way Speaker of the House Paul Ryan s plan First 100 days of Franklin D Roosevelt s presidency First 100 days of Barack Obama s presidency First 100 days of Joe Biden s presidency Presidential transition of Donald Trump Political positions of Donald Trump Opinion polling on the Donald Trump administration Timeline of investigations into Trump and Russia January June 2017 Notes edit The President s budget is formulated with the Office of Management and Budget OMB currently led by Mick Mulvaney According to the rules and legislation governing the federal budget process annual funding bills appropriations bill are submitted annually and have to be passed through Congress and the Senate and then signed by the President Budget resolutions are under the jurisdiction of the United States House Committee on Appropriations and the United States Senate Committee on AppropriationsReferences edit Setting the record straight President Trump s first 100 days GovTrack Insider April 29 2017 Retrieved April 19 2021 Trump s first 100 days ends tomorrow at noon a b c d Trump says he won t label China a currency manipulator Fox News via AP April 12 2017 Retrieved April 28 2017 a b c d e f Gerard Baker Carol E Lee amp Michael C Bender April 12 2017 Trump Says Dollar Getting Too Strong Won t Label China a Currency Manipulator President leaves open possibility of renominating Fed Chairwoman Janet Yellen Washington Retrieved April 28 2017 Dan Balz amp Scott Clement April 23 2017 Nearing 100 days Trump s approval at record lows but his base is holding The Washington Post Retrieved April 27 2017 a b Blake Aaron April 25 2017 President Trump just had his bluff called again Washington Post Retrieved April 25 2017 Valverde Miriam April 25 2017 Is illegal immigration the lowest in 17 years as Trump said Politifact Retrieved April 27 2017 a b How Trump s first 100 days compares to past presidencies April 26 2017 Retrieved April 26 2017 a b Jacobson Louis April 24 2017 How do Donald Trump s first 100 days rate historically Retrieved April 27 2017 a b Berman Russell April 6 2017 Barack Obama s Seven Year Presidency The lone legislative accomplishment of Donald Trump s first 100 days will likely be erasing the final months of his predecessor s tenure The Atlantic Retrieved April 6 2017 a b c d e f CRA Tracking Senate Republican Policy Committee CRA n d Archived from the original on April 27 2017 Retrieved April 18 2017 a b c d Green Emma March 30 2017 Mike Pence Brings Congress One Step Closer to Defunding Planned Parenthood The vice president broke a tie on a Senate vote to overturn a regulation that protects the clinics The Atlantic Retrieved April 10 2017 Fabian Jordan April 28 2017 Trump disappointed in congressional GOP Retrieved April 28 2017 TRUmp s FIRST 100 DAYS Here s how they compare with Obama s Bush s and Clinton s Business Insider Leonhardt David April 26 2017 Opinion Donald Trump s First 100 Days The Worst on Record The New York Times How do Donald Trump s first 100 days rate historically Politifact Donald J Trump October 22 2016 Donald J Trump Delivers Groundbreaking Contract for the American Voter in Gettysburg Donald J Trump for President Archived from the original on November 11 2016 Retrieved November 11 2016 Schoen John W November 9 2016 Here s what s coming from the Trump administration CNBC Retrieved November 9 2016 These are Trump s key promises for his first 100 days CNN November 9 2016 Retrieved January 29 2017 Trump calls for congressional term limits lobbyist crackdown Fox News October 18 2016 Retrieved November 13 2016 Berenson Tessa October 18 2016 Donald Trump Wants Term Limits For Congress Time com Retrieved November 13 2016 Johnson Jenna January 8 2016 Donald Trump I will get rid of gun free zones on schools Washington Post Retrieved January 17 2017 a b Saba Yousef November 21 2016 Trump announces executive actions for Day One Politico What it means if Trump names China a currency manipulator Associated Press December 29 2016 Retrieved January 19 2017 a b Wilbur Ross Andy Puzder amp Peter Navarro Economic Analysis of Donald Trump s Contract with the American Voter Archived April 28 2017 at the Wayback Machine Donald J Trump for President Inc October 30 2016 a b Read Donald Trump s Speech on Trade Time June 28 2016 Retrieved April 26 2017 The First 100 Days Trump vows big changes for trade with China Fox News December 14 2016 Retrieved April 26 2017 WhiteHouse gov Turns the Page Washington Post January 21 2009 Retrieved January 22 2017 Selyukh Alina January 20 2017 On The Day Of White House Transitions Twitter Shifts POTUS To Donald Trump NPR Retrieved January 20 2017 Singman Brooke February 8 2017 Trump Facing Historic Delays in Confirmation Push Fox News Retrieved February 8 2017 Schoen John W February 24 2017 No President has Ever Waited This Long to Get a Cabinet Approved CNBC Retrieved February 27 2017 Tom LoBianco Ted Barrett amp Eugene Scott February 7 2017 Betsy DeVos confirmed as education secretary vice president casts historic tie breaking vote CNN Retrieved February 8 2017 President Trump announces his full Cabinet roster Retrieved February 9 2017 Mooney Chris Wagner John January 19 2017 Trump picks Sonny Perdue for agriculture secretary The Washington Post Retrieved January 19 2017 Donald Trump s Cabinet is Almost Complete Here s the Latest List The New York Times April 12 2017 Retrieved April 24 2017 Lamothe Dan January 20 2017 James Mattis is sworn in as defense secretary pledges to build alliances Washington Post Retrieved January 22 2017 Kopan Tal January 20 2017 Senate confirms Trump s first two Cabinet members CNN Retrieved January 22 2017 a b Trump cabinet Rex Tillerson sworn in as top US diplomat BBC February 2 2017 Retrieved February 2 2017 a b Remarks by President Trump and Vice President Pence at Swearing In Ceremony for Secretary of State Rex Tillerson whitehouse gov Washington February 1 2017 Retrieved February 2 2017 via National Archives Rex Tillerson Exxon C E O Chosen as Secretary of State The New York Times December 13 2016 Retrieved February 2 2017 Senate committee approves Tillerson for secretary of state CNN Retrieved January 23 2017 Senate Executive Session Congressional Record January 24 2017 Retrieved January 26 2017 The official daily record of the debates and proceedings of the U S Congress The State Department s entire senior administrative team just resigned The Washington Post January 26 2017 Retrieved January 27 2017 David A Graham January 26 2017 Trump s Hollowed Out State Department The Atlantic Retrieved January 29 2017 Abrupt departures of top officials Wednesday under disputed circumstances leave Foggy Bottom without a confirmed secretary or nominees for several top leadership jobs Several career diplomats have resigned from the State Department Chicago Tribune Washington DC January 26 2017 Retrieved January 29 2017 a b Wadman Meredith February 10 2017 Senate confirms Price to lead HHS Science American Association for the Advancement of Science Retrieved February 17 2017 Jeremy Peters Barry Meier February 5 2015 Rand Paul Is Linked to Doctors Group That Supports Vaccination Challenges The New York Times Delaney Arthur January 24 2017 Tom Price Tries To Assure Senators He s Not Crazy On Vaccines The Huffington Post Appelbaum Julie Hirschfeld Davis Binyamin Haberman Maggie November 29 2016 Trump Taps Hollywood s Mnuchin for Treasury and Dines With Romney The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved February 14 2017 a href Template Cite news html title Template Cite news cite news a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link President Elect Donald J Trump to Nominate Steven Mnuchin as Secretary of the Treasury Wilbur Ross as Secretary of Commerce and Todd Ricketts as Deputy Secretary of Commerce Greatagain gov November 30 2016 Archived from the original on September 5 2017 Retrieved December 11 2016 Rappeport Alan January 13 2017 Steven Mnuchin Is Confirmed as Treasury Secretary The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved January 14 2017 a b Trump says Mnuchin will fight for tax cuts and jobs BBC News February 14 2017 Retrieved February 15 2017 a b c d e Damian Paletta Mike Bender amp Nick Timiraos February 11 2017 Gary Cohn Has Emerged as an Economic Policy Powerhouse in Trump Administration The Wall Street Journal Washington Retrieved February 12 2017 Isidore Chris January 19 2017 Trump Treasury pick I have been maligned CNN Money Retrieved January 19 2017 Rappeport Alan January 19 2017 Steven Mnuchin Treasury Nominee Failed to Disclose 100 Million in Assets The New York Times Retrieved January 19 2017 a b Senate advances nomination of Trump pick Pruitt to head EPA Reuters February 16 2017 Retrieved February 16 2017 Dennis Brady February 16 2017 On eve of confirmation vote judge orders EPA nominee to release thousands of emails The Washington Post Retrieved February 16 2017 Baker Peter February 16 2017 R Alexander Acosta Law School Dean Is Trump s New Pick for Labor The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved February 16 2017 Rappeport Alan February 15 2017 Andrew Puzder Withdraws From Consideration as Labor Secretary The New York Times Retrieved February 16 2017 In an erratic performance President Trump shows his supporters who s boss The Washington Post February 16 2017 Retrieved April 26 2017 Tracking how many key positions Trump has filled so far The Washington Post April 27 2017 Retrieved April 27 2017 in collaboration with Partnership for Public Service Sonam Sheth amp Skye Gould April 22 2017 Who s Running the Government Trump has yet to fill 85 of key executive branch positions Business Insider Retrieved April 27 2017 Shields and Gerson on Georgia election pressure Bill O Reilly s Fox News fall PBS Newshour April 21 2017 Retrieved April 27 2017 Cecilia Kang amp Michael D Shear March 30 2017 Trump Leaves Science Jobs Vacant Troubling Critics The New York Times Retrieved April 27 2017 Donald Trump Picks Reince Priebus as Chief of Staff and Stephen Bannon as Strategist The New York Times November 13 2016 Retrieved January 20 2017 Murray Sara January 20 2017 The power struggle among Trump s inner circle CNN Retrieved January 29 2017 Michael T Flynn Biography Archived from the original on August 3 2014 Retrieved April 26 2017 Apuzzo Maggie Haberman Matthew Rosenberg Matt Thrush Glenn February 13 2017 Michael Flynn Resigns as National Security Adviser The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved February 14 2017 a href Template Cite news html title Template Cite news cite news a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link a b Hawkins Derek February 14 2017 Flynn sets record with only 24 days as national security adviser The average tenure is about 2 6 years Washington Post Retrieved February 14 2017 a b c Landler Mark February 14 2017 The Michael Flynn Resignation What We Know What We Don t The New York Times Retrieved February 17 2017 Evan Perez amp Jeremy Diamond January 30 2017 Trump fires acting AG after she declines to defend travel ban CNN Landler Mark Apuzzo Matt Lichtblau Eric January 30 2017 Trump Fires Acting Attorney General The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved January 30 2017 Trump Selects Lt Gen H R McMaster as National Security Adviser Fox News February 20 2017 Retrieved February 20 2017 Trump Names Lt Gen HR McMaster as National Security Adviser BBC News February 20 2017 Retrieved February 20 2017 Talev Margaret February 20 2017 Trump Picks Outspoken Army Rebel as National Security Adviser Retrieved February 21 2017 Diamond Jeremy Trump picks Lt Gen H R McMaster as new national security adviser CNN Retrieved February 21 2017 Vogel Kenneth P Johnson Eliana March 4 2017 Trump steps in to keep 30 year old NSC aide Politico Retrieved April 6 2017 a b Miller Greg DeYoung Karen March 30 2017 Three White House officials tied to files shared with House intelligence chairman The Washington Post Retrieved April 6 2017 Presidential Memorandum Regarding Organization of the National Security Council and the Homeland Security Council Wikisource January 28 2017 Retrieved January 29 2017 With National Security Council Shakeup Steve Bannon Gets A Seat At The Table NPR January 29 2017 Retrieved January 29 2017 a b Peter Baker Maggie Haberman amp Glenn Thrush April 5 2017 Trump Removes Stephen Bannon From National Security Council Post The New York Times Retrieved April 6 2017 With crucial posts still vacant Gary Cohn a longtime Goldman Sachs executive has become the president s go to figure on matters related to jobs business and growth a b Paul McGeough Booting of Stephen Bannon from NSC a McMaster stroke from Donald Trump s NSA chief The Sydney Morning Herald Sydney Australia a b Donald Trump interviewed by Michael Gove and Kai Diekmann Times of London New York January 16 2017 Retrieved February 1 2017 Full text transcript Wilner Michael January 16 2017 Trump Jared Kushner will broker Mideast peace for the White House Jerusalem Post Retrieved April 6 2017 Karni Annie February 11 2017 Jared Kushner s Mission Impossible Politico Retrieved April 6 2017 a href Template Cite magazine html title Template Cite magazine cite magazine a Cite magazine requires magazine help a b Kwong Matt April 4 2017 How much is too much Jared Kushner s ever expanding role in Trump administration President Donald Trump s son in law advising on everything from innovation to Middle East peace to China CBC News Retrieved April 4 2017 Kushner accompanied the head of the Joint Chiefs of Staff in a covert trip to meet with Iraqi Prime Minister Haider al Abadi Arango Tim April 3 2017 Jared Kushner Meets With Iraqi Leader on Future of ISIS Battle The New York Times Retrieved April 6 2017 Ashley Parker amp Philip Rucker March 26 2017 Trump taps Kushner to lead a SWAT team to fix government with business ideas The Washington Post Retrieved March 28 2017 Presidential Memorandum on The White House Office of American Innovation whitehouse gov Office of the Press Secretary White House March 29 2017 Retrieved April 4 2017 via National Archives Diamond Jeremy March 26 2017 Kushner to lead American Innovation office at White House CNN Retrieved March 28 2017 a b Slack Donovan March 27 2017 Trump taps Kushner to lead new White House Office of American Innovation USA Today Washington Retrieved March 28 2017 Presidential Executive Order Establishing the President s Commission on Combating Drug Addiction and the Opioid Crisis Presidential Memorandum Office of the Press Secretary White House March 29 2017 Archived from the original on March 30 2017 Retrieved April 4 2017 Chris Christie to lead White House s opioid addiction commission The Washington Times March 29 2017 Retrieved April 4 2017 Thrush Glenn Haberman Maggie January 29 2017 Bannon Is Given Security Role Usually Held for Generals The New York Times Phippen J Weston January 29 2017 Trump Gives Stephen Bannon Access to the National Security Council The Atlantic Retrieved January 29 2017 Trump puts Bannon on security council dropping joint chiefs BBC News January 29 2017 Retrieved January 29 2017 Yuhas Alan January 29 2017 Trump chief of staff defense officials not off NSC after Bannon move The Guardian Retrieved January 30 2017 Garamone Jim January 31 2017 No Change to Chairman s Status as Senior Military Adviser Officials Say US Department of Defense Retrieved January 31 2017 David von Dreble February 2 2017 Is Steve Bannon the second most powerful man in the world Time Concha Joe February 2 2017 Time cover labels Bannon The Great Manipulator The Hill a b Elving Ron February 6 2017 A Fortnight To Remember The Trump Presidency Bursts Into Being NPR Retrieved February 10 2017 a b Behind Steve Bannon s worldview and behind the scenes influence CBS News February 6 2017 Retrieved February 10 2017 There s only one person in charge in the Trump administration and that s President Donald Trump But we value we value Steve Bannon s input Mike Pence told PBS NewsHour a b Green Joshua October 8 2015 This Man Is the Most Dangerous Political Operative in America Bloomberg Businessweek Retrieved February 10 2017 Steve Bannon runs the new vast right wing conspiracy and he wants to take down both Hillary Clinton and Jeb Bush Sarna Kate December 3 2015 Trump Says A Misleading Breitbart News Article Vindicates His Claim That Thousands Of Muslim Americans Celebrated After 9 11 Report Shows Only Eight Men Were Found Celebrating Not Thousands Media Matters Retrieved February 10 2017 Costa Robert January 25 2016 Top Sessions aide joins Trump campaign The Washington Post Retrieved January 30 2017 Hackman Michelle July 21 2016 The Speechwriter Behind Donald Trump s Republican Convention Address The Wall Street Journal Retrieved August 6 2016 Stephen Miller s brash path from Duke campus to Trump White House The News amp Observer February 3 2017 a b Glenn Thrush amp Jennifer Steinhauer February 11 2017 Stephen Miller Is a True Believer Behind Core Trump Policies New York Times Retrieved February 11 2017 Bennett Brian January 29 2017 Travel ban is the clearest sign yet of Trump advisors intent to reshape the country Los Angeles Times Retrieved January 30 2017 a b Savransky Rebecca January 30 2017 Scarborough singles out Trump aide Stephen Miller for power trip The Hill Retrieved January 30 2017 a b c d Watkins Eli February 10 2017 FEC commissioner asks Trump for voter fraud evidence Washington CNN Retrieved February 12 2017 thousands of people being bused from Massachusetts to vote illegally in New Hampshire a state he narrowly lost to Hillary Clinton a b c Tani Maxwell February 12 2017 You have provided absolutely no evidence Stephanopoulos grills Trump adviser in a testy interview about voter fraud Business Insider Retrieved February 12 2017 a b c Ellen L Weintraub February 10 2017 Statement of Commissioner Ellen L Weintraub Regarding Allegations by the President of the United States of Widespread Voter Fraud in New Hampshire PDF Washington Federal Election Commission FEC Retrieved October 11 2020 The scheme the President of the United States alleges would constitute thousands of felony criminal offenses under New Hampshire law The President has issued an extraordinarily serious and specific charge Allegations of this magnitude cannot be ignored I therefore call upon President Trump to immediately share his evidence with the public and with the appropriate law enforcement authorities so that his allegations may be investigated promptly and thoroughly a b c d Kelly Kate February 2012 Inaccurate Costly and Inefficient Evidence That America s Voter Registration System Needs an Upgrade PDF Washington Pew Research Center p 12 Retrieved February 12 2017 Eligible citizens who remain unregistered The data indicate that at least 51 million citizens appear to be unregistered in the United States or more than 24 percent of the eligible population Conversely Canada which uses innovative technology and data matching methods has 93 percent of its eligible voters on the rolls p 8 a b c Carroll Lauren January 25 2017 Sean Spicer wrongly uses Pew study to bolster claim that non citizens vote in large numbers PolitiFact com Retrieved February 12 2017 Sean Spicer January 24 daily press briefing There s one study that came out of Pew in 2008 that showed 14 percent of people who voted were noncitizens Gary Cohn Is Leaving Goldman Sachs To Chair Donald Trump s National Forbes December 12 2016 Retrieved February 12 2017 Kelly Kate February 11 2017 Trump s Economic Cabinet Is Mostly Bare This Man Fills the Void The New York Times Retrieved February 12 2017 With crucial posts still vacant Gary Cohn a longtime Goldman Sachs executive has become the president s go to figure on matters related to jobs business and growth Egan Matt January 27 2017 Trump adviser Gary Cohn s 285 million Goldman Sachs exit raises eyebrows CNN Money Retrieved January 27 2017 Domm Patti February 17 2017 Border adjustment tax is on life support and tax reform may come later and with less punch CNBC Retrieved February 17 2017 Townsend Matthew February 17 2017 Ryan Insists Tax Overhaul Coming as Koch Group Assails Plan Bloomberg News Retrieved February 17 2017 Rep Kevin Brady Discusses Border Adjustment Taxes Bloomberg The Bureau of National Affairs February 17 2017 Archived from the original on March 1 2019 Retrieved February 17 2017 Nitti Tony January 26 2016 The Border Adjustment Tax For Dummies Who Will Pay For The Wall Forbes Retrieved February 17 2017 White House Press Secretary Sean Spicer explained that the U S could easily pay for the 15 billion wall by imposing a 20 tax on all imports from Mexico which would generate 10 billion a year a major sea change in the way the U S taxes corporations It s complicated Trump s steep learning curve BBC News April 13 2017 Retrieved April 13 2017 Donald Trump s Mexico wall Who is going to pay for it BBC News February 6 2017 Retrieved April 14 2017 Domestic Social Policy Division Congressional Research Service Report May 4 2016 Retrieved April 23 2017 a b Penman Maggie January 21 2017 President Trump s First Hours In Office NPR Retrieved January 22 2017 C Stephen Redhead amp Janet Kinzer January 9 2017 Legislative Actions to Repeal Defund or Delay the Affordable Care Act PDF Congressional Research Service p 23 Retrieved January 13 2017 S Con Res 3 A concurrent resolution setting forth the congressional budget for the United States Government for fiscal year 2017 and setting forth the appropriate budgetary levels for fiscal years 2018 through 2026 United States Congress January 3 2017 Retrieved January 12 2017 Snell Kelsey DeBonis Mike January 12 2017 Obamacare is one step closer to repeal after Senate advances budget resolution Washington Post Retrieved January 12 2017 Repealing the law known as Obamacare would leave 32m without health coverage analysis finds TheGuardian com January 17 2017 Retrieved April 26 2017 Davis Julie Hirschfeld Pear Robert January 20 2017 Trump Issues Executive Order Scaling Back Parts of Obamacare The New York Times New York City Retrieved January 23 2017 Leonard Kimberly February 6 2017 Trump Appears to Push Back Obamacare Replacement The president again called Obamacare a disaster that doesn t work Retrieved February 8 2017 Stephanie Armour amp Kristina Peterson March 13 2017 CBO Sees 24 Million More Uninsured 337 Billion Deficit Cut in Coming Decade With GOP Health Plan Wall Street Journal Retrieved March 16 2017 CBO estimates 14 million more uninsured next year under GOP plan The number of Americans without health insurance would grow by 24 million under a House Republican proposal to topple most of the Affordable Care Act according to a nonpartisan report that is likely to complicate GOP lawmakers efforts to unite around the plan Kurtzleben Danielle March 13 2017 GOP Health Care Bill Could Leave 24M More Without Coverage By 2026 CBO Says NPR Retrieved March 16 2017 Congressional Budget Office Cost Estimate American Health Care Act Budget Reconciliation Recommendations of the House Committees on Ways and Means and Energy and Commerce PDF Report Congressional Budget Office March 9 2017 p 37 Retrieved March 16 2017 a b In Major Defeat for Trump Push to Repeal Health Law Fails The New York Times March 24 2017 Retrieved March 24 2017 a b Robert Costa Ashley Parker amp Philip Rucker March 24 2017 The closer The inside story of how Trump tried and failed to make a deal on health care The Washington Post Retrieved March 24 2017 Jacobs Ben Smith David March 24 2017 Republican repeal of Obamacare fails as healthcare bill pulled from House vote The Guardian ISSN 0261 3077 Retrieved March 24 2017 Carroll Rory April 3 2017 Protesting Trump s immigration policy You might be accidentally helping him Outrage over the threat to undocumented immigrants may be fuelling undue panic and could be part of Trump s big plan The Guardian Los Angeles Retrieved April 20 2017 Pace Julie April 20 2017 Transcript of AP interview with Trump AP White House Retrieved April 24 2017 Merchant Nomaan April 22 2017 Young immigrants won t rest easy despite Trump s comments PBS Houston Retrieved April 24 2017 Julie Hirschfeld Davis amp Jennifer Steinhauer February 26 2017 Trump s Soft Spot for Dreamers Alienates Immigration Hard Liners The New York Times Retrieved April 24 2017 Julian Borger and David Smith in Washington Backlash against Trump migration order grows as Obama issues warning US news The Guardian Retrieved February 1 2017 Fact check White House claims 109 affected by travel ban it s more like 90 000 Chicago Tribune January 30 2017 Retrieved January 31 2017 Michael D Shear amp Alan Feuer January 27 2017 Judge Blocks Part of Trump s Immigration Order New York Times Retrieved January 27 2017 a b Full Executive Order Text Trump s Action Limiting Refugees Into the U S New York Times January 27 2017 Retrieved January 27 2017 McKay Hollie January 25 2017 U S backed Iraqi fighters say Trump s refugee ban feels like betrayal Fox News Retrieved January 27 2017 America s president An insurgent in the White House As Donald Trump rages against the world he inherited as president America s allies are worried and rightly so The Economist February 4 2017 Retrieved February 4 2017 The UK can t avoid dealing with Donald Trump but we must engage intelligently New Statesman February 3 2017 Retrieved April 26 2017 a b J Weston Phippen February 4 2017 The Department of Homeland Security and the State Department Suspend Trump s Travel Ban The Atlantic Retrieved February 4 2017 a b Judge to hear state s lawsuit against Trump s immigration ban Friday KIRO February 3 2017 a b Person Daniel February 3 2017 No One Is Above the Law Federal Judge in Seattle Puts Trump s Immigration Order On Ice Seattle Weekly Bennett Brian January 29 2017 Travel ban is the clearest sign yet of Trump advisors intent to reshape the country L A Times Washington Retrieved January 29 2017 Perez Evan Brown Pamela Liptak Kevin January 29 2017 Inside the confusion of the Trump executive order and travel ban CNN Retrieved January 29 2017 The Henley amp Partners Visa Restrictions Index 2016 Global Travel Freedom at a Glance PDF Henley amp Partners February 23 2016 p 4 Archived from the original PDF on March 12 2016 Retrieved January 30 2017 Germany has the highest score at 177 points and Afghanistan has the lowest at 25 placing it at the 104th place Kosovo South Sudan and Yemen ranked 97 out of 104 Eritrea Ethiopia Iran 98 104 Nepal and the Palestinian Territory ranked 98 out of 104 with a score of 98 Sudan Libya Syria 100 104 Somalia 100 104 Iraq 102 104 and Pakistan and Afghanistan followed with the lowest scores Nordland Rod November 19 2011 Afghanistan Has Big Plans for Biometric Data The New York Times Retrieved April 24 2012 Mica Rosenbergs amp Jonathan Stempel January 28 2017 U S judges limit Trump immigration order some officials ignore rulings Reuters Retrieved January 28 2017 U N rights chief says Trump s travel ban is illegal Reuters January 30 2017 Retrieved February 4 2017 Thornton Liam January 30 2017 Does Donald Trump s Immigration Ban Breach International Law Newsweek Retrieved February 3 2017 Zurcher Anthony January 31 2017 Is Trump s immigration order legal BBC News Retrieved February 3 2017 Powell Rebeka January 29 2017 Protesters descend on US airports rallying against Trump s immigration policies ABC News Sydney Aus, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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