MOAB, the "Mother Of All bombs"
- April 13, 2017—Under the increased autonomy President Trump gave the Defense Department,[212] the U.S. dropped a GBU-43B (also known as MOAB or the "Mother Of All bombs"), the largest non-nuclear bomb in existence at 21,000 pounds on a complex of Islamic State tunnels in Afghanistan. Although tested in 2003, the bomb had never been used in combat before.[213] It caused much damage,[214][215]being estimated to have killed at least 94 ISIS fighters, including four commanders – no civilians were killed.[216] It also destroyed several of the tunnels as well as weapon stockpiles.[217][218] The attack was reported as having dealt a heavy blow to ISIS's Afghanistan branch.[219]
- April 21, 2017—The Trump Administration refused to issue waivers to any companies which wanted to do business with Russia, which was under economic sanctions, including ExxonMobil, which had applied for a waiver.[220][221] The day earlier, the Trump Administration announced, in strong language, it was implementing the Global Magnitsky Human Rights Accountability Act, which blacklisted certain Russian citizens.[222][223]
- Early in Trump's presidency, he and his administration took a much tougher tone against North Korea than his predecessors.[224] While the deployment was first announced during the Obama Administration, the Trump Administration confirmed it would continue the plans to – and subsequently did – deploy the THAAD missile defense system to South Korea despite China's strong objections.[225] THAAD was first used on May 14, 2017.[226]
- Unlike former President Obama, the State Department under President Trump described the Afghanistan Taliban as a terrorist organization without hesitation.[227]
- May 2017—President Trump embarked on an ambitious foreign trip, where he, among other accomplishments, visited the heartlands of the three Abrahamic religions, challenging the Muslim world to get serious about defeating Islamic terrorism, challenging the European leaders to contribute more to NATO, and isolating Iran.[192][228][229][230] While in the Middle East, Trump, unlike Obama, took a strong stance against Iran and strengthened the United States's traditional alliances with Israel and the Arab nations,[231] bringing them closer together.[232] His trip was described as one that "flipped traditional U.S. foreign policy upside down."[233] Here are some highlights and additional achievements of the trip:
- May 20–21, 2017—President Trump visited Saudi Arabia, the first country he visited abroad as U.S. President. His trip to the country was a major event that clearly broke from foreign policy set by Barack Obama.[234] He received a very warm welcome[235] – much warmer than what Obama (under whom relations became estranged[236]) received – with King Salman bin Abdulaziz Al Saud greeting Trump at the tarmac, something Obama did not receive.[237] Unlike Obama, Trump did not bow to the Saudi king,[237][238] and he did not embark on an "apology tour" like Obama.[239] Trump signed a $110 billion arms deal with Saudi Arabia, with another $350 billion of arms for the following 10 years.[240] American and Saudi businesses signed similar agreements on the same day, with billions of dollars to be invested in the U.S.[241] President Trump also gave a major speech to leaders of 50 Islamic world leaders challenging them to fight Islamic terror.[242] Trump gave a blunt speech, stronger than Obama's,[243] and he did not mention democracy or human rights, rather speaking about "good vs. evil," something his Islamic audience was more receptive to.[244] (despite this, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates agreed to donate $100 million to a women entrepreneurs fund proposed by Ivanka Trump[245]). The U.S. and Saudi Arabia strengthened counterterrorism ties by enacting joint sanctions on two "global terrorists,"[246] and Saudi Arabia opened a center to combat Islamic terrorism.[247] (according to President Trump, the commitment to combating Islamic terrorism was already being seen when several Arab nations cut ties with Qatar due to its support of Islamic terrorism and Iran[248]).
- May 22–23, 2017—The second country President Trump visited was Israel, and his trip marked the first time a U.S. president visited the country on their first foreign trip.[249] He visited the country on the 50th anniversary of the Six-Day War and Israel's capture of Jerusalem.[250] His flight from Saudi Arabia to Israel was one of the rare flights taken between the two countries and the first of a U.S. president to fly from the former to the latter.[251] A major suicide bombing occurred in the United Kingdom during the visit, and Trump denied recognition to the attacker[252] and other Islamic terrorists by calling them "losers."[253] Although not moving the U.S. embassy to Jerusalem as hoped,[254] President Trump did become the first sitting U.S. President to visit the Western Wall[255] and the Administration stated that the Trump was in "Jerusalem, Israel."[256] President Trump did not mention anything about a Palestinian state, a two-state solution, or about Israeli settlements.[257] It was also reported that the U.S. increased defense funding for Israel by $75 million.[258]
- May 25, 2017—At the 2017 NATO summit, President Trump strongly stated his position that the other NATO member states should meet their expected contributions to the organization.[259]
- May 26–27, 2017—At the 2017 G7 conference, President Trump focused on terrorism rather than climate change, as the other European leaders wished.[260] Much to the consternation of the G7 world leaders,[261] who lobbied for President Trump to accept the Paris climate agreement, Trump stood firm and refused to pledge commitment to the accords[262] so he could still deliberate over whether to stay in it.[263] (Trump ultimately announced, on June 1, 2017, that the U.S. would leave the agreement and cease implementing it[161]). President Trump was also reported as having refused to sign a declaration that stated the benefits as well as "pitfalls" of immigration.[264][265]
- May 27, 2017—President Trump concluded his trip by speaking to U.S. soldiers,[266] as opposed to holding a press conference.[267]
- May 26, 2017—President Trump made clear his stance against terrorism in a statement wishing Muslims a joyful Ramadan.[268]
Size of Government
The Trump Administration's rollback of regulations was described in May 2017 as its "biggest untold success."
[269] President Trump and Congress spent much time rolling back regulations, particularly those created by Obama.
[270] In the first six weeks of Trump's presidency, over 90 regulations were repealed, whether through executive orders, Acts of Congress, or other means
[271][272] — clearly keeping his promises.
[273]Additionally, by late May 2017, the Trump Administration approved a record low amount of new regulations – $33 million in new regulatory costs by May 23 as opposed to $26 billion in the same period in previous administrations, and releasing 8% the average amount of rules released by the past three administrations during the same period of time.
[274]
Legislation signed
- President Trump successfully made use of Congressional Review to roll back Obama-era regulations—even more than expected.[275][276]Prior to Trump's presidency, the Congressional Review Act had been used only once successfully, sixteen years prior.[277] When the window to use the CRA for the 115th Congress ended, Congress had passed and Trump had signed 14 CRA resolutions repealing Obama regulations[278][279][280] – significantly more than expected.[278][281] These actions were estimated to have saved $3.7 billion in regulatory costs and up to $36.2 billion in compliance costs.[278][282] Some examples of CRA legislation signed by President Trump follow (other examples can be found elsewhere in the article):
- February 14, 2017—President Trump signed a bill into law repealing an Obama Era relation requiring energy companies to disclose financial transactions with foreign governments.[142][283][284]
- February 16, 2017—President Trump signed a bill into law blocking the "Stream Protection Rule," an environmental regulation.[285][286]
- March 27, 2017—President Trump signed four bills undoing Obama-era regulations.[275][287] Two of those bills rolled back federal education regulations.[288]
- March 31, 2017—President Trump signed another bill undoing an Obama-era regulation, giving the power back to the states to expand drug testing for unemployment benefit applicants.[289]
- April 3, 2017—President Trump signed a bill reversing an Obama-era FCC privacy regulation applicable to internet service providers. The FCC had adopted the rule to fill a gap created by a court case which ruled that the FTC did not have jurisdiction to extend its privacy rule over internet service providers because they were regulated by the FCC. The new law repealed the FCC rule and prohibits the FCC from enacting a replacement for 10 years without giving the FTC jurisdiction to regulate internet service providers' privacy practices.[290] Part of yet another series of bills undoing other Obama regulations.[291]
- May 12, 2017—President Trump signed Public Law 115-33 (S. 496),[292] which repealed a rule by the Department of Transportation that would have taken power away from local governments on infrastructure planning.[293] The bill did not invoke the CRA.[292]
Executive actions
- January 20, 2017—On its first day in office, the Trump Administration ordered a regulatory freeze on all federal governmental agencies.[294]
- On Inauguration Day, 2017, the Trump administration instituted a federal hiring freeze.[295] On January 23, 2017, Trump signed an executive order instituting the hiring freeze, from which the military was exempted.[296] On April 12, 2017, the hiring freeze was replaced with a plan to restructure and shrink the executive branch.[297][298]
- January 30, 2017—Trump signed an executive order that requires two federal regulations must be eliminated for every regulation created.[299][300][301]
- February 3, 2017—President Trump signed a memorandum directing the United States Department of Labor to review a regulation signed by Obama set to go into effect.[302]
- February 24, 2017—President Trump signed an executive order requiring every federal agency to create a "regulatory reform task force" to find unnecessary, burdensome regulations to repeal.[303] This order was called "the most far reaching effort to pare back U.S. red tape in recent decades."[304]
- February 28, 2017—President Trump announced that he did not plan on filling numerous government positions he considered unnecessary.[305] According to one source, about 2,000 positions were vacant, and most of them were likely included in this list.[306] As of April 4, 2017, President Trump did not make a nomination for nearly 500 positions requiring Senate confirmation.[307]
- March 13, 2017—President Trump signed an executive order to perform an audit on every executive branch agency in order to reduce spending and waste and improve services.[308][309][310]
- April 25, 2017—President Trump signed an executive order ordering the Department of Agriculture to find and eliminate unnecessary regulations, in an effort to help farmers, particularly in the light of NAFTA and the trade imbalance with Canada.[311]
- April 26, 2017—President Trump signed an executive order ordering the Interior Department to review designations of national monuments from as far back as 20 years prior, with the intention of reversing federal overreach in land acquisition and returning power to the states.[312]
- April 26, 2017—President Trump signed an executive order ordering Secretary of Education Betsy DeVos to review Department of Education regulations, with the intention of returning power to the states and local governments.[313][314]
- May 22, 2017—Although Education Secretary Betsy DeVos supported school choice and stated the Administration would create a school choice plan, she stated she would not force the states to expand school choice and would let them decide their own policies – this showed the Trump Administration's respect for state sovereignty.[315] It was a wise decision, considering the ability of liberal and Democrats to hijack such a federal program.[316]
Military and national security
Legislation signed
- H.R. 244, which was signed into law by President Trump on May 5, 2017 and funded the government through September 30, 2017, expanded military spending by about $21 billion without an identical increase in domestic spending and fulfilled several of the military's requests.[317]
Executive actions
- January 27, 2017—President Trump signed a memorandum to begin the expansion and rebuilding of the U.S. military.[318][319]
- February 3, 2017—The Trump Administration and Lockheed Martin reached a tentative deal that would purchase 90 F-35 jets at the lowest price in the program's history.[320][321] The first 90 planes were about $725 million below budget, with billions of more dollars of savings expected, and it saved at least one U.S. ally, Japan, $100 million.[322][323]
- May 11, 2017—President Trump signed an executive order to review U.S. cyber security and hold the various federal departments accountable for ensuring the protection of valuable information.[324]
- May 11, 2017—President Trump signed an executive order creating a commission, chaired by Vice President Mike Pence and vice-chaired by Kansas Secretary of State Kris Kobach, to review the extent of voter fraud and suppression in the United States.[325][326]
Proclamations
- January 20, 2017—The day he was inaugurated, President Trump instituted a national day of patriotism for the country,[327] and a few days later Trump officially designated his inauguration day the National Day of Patriotic Devotion.[328][329]
- January 22–28, 2017—National School Choice Week, as proclaimed by President Trump[330][331]
- May 1, 2017—President Trump proclaimed that day as Loyalty Day, to "recognize and reaffirm our allegiance" to American values, such as "individual liberties, to limited government, and to the inherent dignity of every human being."[332][333]
Other
- On January 5, 2017, the U.S. House passed a motion condemning Obama's allowing a leftist anti-Israel resolution to pass in the UN.[334][335]Additionally, Trump voiced his strong support for Israel during his transition.[336][337] On April 27, 2017, all 100 members of the U.S. Senate sent a letter to United Nations Secretary-General António Guterres demanding an end to the anti-Israel bias in the UN.[338] After that, the U.S. condemned the UN after the organization ignored the letter from the Senate.[339] On June 5, 2017, the U.S. Senate passed a resolution observing the 50th anniversary of the unification of Jerusalem and called for President Trump to move the U.S. embassy to Jerusalem,[340]and Congress commemorated the event.[341]
- January 20, 2017—On the day he took office, Trump returned the bust of UK Prime Minister Winston Churchill to the Oval Office that Obama removed when he took office.[342] He also accepted the United Kingdom's offer to re-loan the second identical bust of Churchill, which Obama removed and returned after the first loan expired.[343]
- January 28, 2017—Trump signed an executive order banning administration officials from lobbying their federal agencies for five years, as well as banning them for life from lobbying foreign nations and political parties.[344][345]
- January 30, 2017—Trump showed he would not tolerate incompetent leftist administration officials when he fired acting Attorney General Sally Yates (a left-wing Obama holdover) when she refused to defend his refugee and immigration ban executive order.[346][347] Trump emulated Ronald Reagan's firing of the striking PATCO workers in 1981 by doing so,[348] contrary to the mainstream media spin.[349] That same night, Trump replaced the acting director of Immigration and Customs Enforcement (another Obama holdover) with a more competent official who had a reputation for enforcing immigration laws.[102]
- March 10, 2017—Conservative attorney General Jeff Sessions asked the 46 remaining U.S. attorneys appointed by Obama, arguably the most left-wing president in U.S. history, to resign.[350][351] One of those U.S. attorneys was the failed Zachary Fardon, who was lax in his prosecution of gun crimes (Sessions directed the Justice Department to increase prosecutions on gun-law violations and to reinforce harsh sentences for such).[352] When one of those attorneys, Preet Bharara, refused to resign (likely for political gain), he was fired.[353] Later, in May 2017, more Obama holdovers left the Justice Department.[354]
- Attorney General Jeff Sessions completely reformed the Justice Department, reorienting it in a strongly conservative direction and with conservative policies, in stark contrast with the Obama Administration.[355]
- March 21, 2017—President Trump signed a bill into law not only funding NASA, but setting a goal of having humans visit Mars "in the 2030s" and potentially colonizing another planet.[356] The bill also funded the agency, the first time such a bill was signed into law in seven years.[357]
- April 21, 2017—President Trump replaced Obama-appointed Vivek Murthy, who was opposed by gun rights groups, as Surgeon General of the United States.[358][359] During the same month, the Trump Administration reassigned two career government officials who had been strongly criticized by conservative organizations.[360]
- May 5, 2017—President Trump attached a signing statement to a five-month spending bill he signed, ignoring several liberal provisions,[361]such as a statement ordering the administration not to enforce federal marijuana laws in states with medical marijuana.[362]
- May 9, 2017—Although he previously stated he was not planning on asking him to resign,[363] President Trump, at the recommendation of Attorney General Jeff Sessions and Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein, fired Obama-appointed FBI director James Comey for being unfit to serve in the position.[364] Democrats and liberals were dismayed at the decision,[365] but it showed that Trump was serious about shaking up D.C. and "draining the swamp."[366]
Non-legislative or policy achievements
- January 20, 2017—Trump became the first president to say "radical Islamic terrorism" in his inaugural address.[3][367]
- January 20, 2017—On the same day as his inauguration, Trump filed for re-election in 2020, breaking the political norm, giving him a head start on campaigning, and giving him additional legal freedoms and flexibility.[368]
- January 27, 2017—Vice President Mike Pence became the first vice president in United States history to speak at the annual March for Life march in Washington D.C.[369][370] Additionally, Trump senior advisor Kellyanne Conway also spoke at the event, and Trump himself strongly expressed his support for the march.[371][372]
- The Trump Administration played a large role in successfully helping prevent CIA officer Sabrina de Sousa from being extradited to Italy, with the decision coming on March 1, 2017.[373] On April 21, 2017, Egypt released an Egyptian-American who had been detained for three years.[374]
- President Trump and his administration have not been afraid to criticize the left-wing Obama Administration for its failures. This could be seen regarding Syria and Obama's failed and broken "red line" promise concerning the Syrian Civil War,[375] as well as Homeland Security Secretary John Kelly criticizing the Obama Administration's failure regarding illegal immigration and national security.[376][377]
- April 28, 2017—President Trump became the first president since Ronald Reagan in 1983 to speak at the National Rifle Association's annual convention.[378][379]
- It was reported in late April 2017 that nine Trump Administration cabinet members, including Vice President Mike Pence, were participating in a weekly Bible study, and members of the House and Senate were also conducting their own Bible studies.[380][381][382] This suggested that the Trump Administration is, at least in part, striving to be under God.[383]
- The national debt decreased after President Trump assumed office, unlike Obama.[384] In Trump's first 100 days in office, the U.S. national debt decreased by $100 billion, as opposed to Obama, where the debt grew by $560 billion by the same point in his presidency.[385]
- While newly-inaugurated U.S. Presidents generally give their first commencement addresses at the University of Notre Dame, President Trump gave his at the conservative Christian Liberty University.[386] One of his lines was, "In America we don’t worship government, we worship God."[387]
- President Trump has shown strong support for the police and against the anti-police "Black Lives Matter" movement.[388]
- June 8, 2017—President Trump showed his support for coal by sending a surprise video message for the opening of a new coal mine, saying that "I want you to know each and every day, I'm fighting for you and all the forgotten men and women of America."[389]
- June 8, 2017—President Trump spoke to the Faith and Freedom Coalition, showing strong support for evangelical Christians and religious liberty. He repeated the statement he made at Liberty University: "in America, we don't worship government. We worship God."[390]
The courts
Supreme Court
President Trump announcing his nomination of Gorsuch, January 31, 2017.
President Trump looks on as Gorsuch is sworn-in.
On January 31, 2017, Trump nominated
Neil Gorsuch to the
U.S. Supreme Court.
[391][392] The nomination was well received by many conservatives.
[393][394] Others, however, such as
Andrew Schlafly, disagreed with the nomination due to concerns about Gorsuch's position on abortion.
[395][396] The Senate ultimately confirmed Gorsuch on a vote of 54–45, even though the GOP was forced to initiate the
nuclear option and lowering the vote threshold to overturn a
filibuster for Supreme Court nominees due to Democrat obstructionism.
[397] Gorsuch assumed office on April 10, 2017.
[398] The appointment and confirmation of Gorsuch within Trump's
first 100 days in office was considered a major achievement for Trump.
[399]
Trump and the stock market
Despite expectations that Trump's election victory would cause the markets to plunge, the
Dow Jones Industrial Average actually performed very strongly, closing at the highest level it had ever reached in history after the second day.
[400] It is rare for the stock market to rise immediately after a U.S. presidential election regardless of the winner.
[400] The stock market had its best week in five years due to the optimism of a Trump presidency.
[401]
Trump was very busy in his first week and showed he was serious about his campaign promises. This caused the
stock market to increase, and the
Dow Jones passed 20,000 points for the first time in its history.
[402][403] It had been only 42 days since the Dow Jones passed 19,000 points, making it the second-fastest 1,000 point move of the Dow in its history.
[404] On March 1, 2017, the day after Trump made his first address to a joint-session of Congress, the stock market rose dramatically again, with the Dow Jones passing the 21,000 mark for the first time in history.
[405][406][407] The stock market had one of the best performances in the
first 100 days of Trump's presidency compared to the first 100 days of previous presidents in U.S. history.
[408]
On June 1, 2017, the same day President Trump announced his decision to withdraw from the Paris Climate Agreement, and the day after,
[409]the stock market rose strongly, mainly due to news of increased economic growth.
[410]
Of course, the stock market did not see only growth during the Trump Administration; on May 17, 2017, for example, the Dow Jones fell 372 points (1.78%) due to the fallout from the
James Comey controversy.
[411]
Trump's victories over the liberal media establishment
See also: Fake news and Liberal media
- Donald Trump helped further discredit the mainstream media due to his repeatedly challenging their honesty and by demonstrating that their predictions regarding his candidacy were repeatedly false. Americans who trust the media is at 32%, an all-time low, according to the Gallup organization.[412] Additionally, between the 2016 election and late January, trust in the media fell from 21 to 15 percent among Trump voters, and even among Clinton voters it fell from 57 to 51 percent.[413]
- Donald Trump's humor has cut down leading media figures to size. He told Wolf Blitzer of CNN that if Megyn Kelly didn't repeatedly attack him, her audience would be even smaller than Blitzer's. When asked by George Stephanopoulos what his biggest mistakes were on the campaign trail, he pointed that Stephanopoulos has regrets too and pointed out his donation to the Clinton Foundation.[414]
- At an hour-long press conference on February 16, 2017, Trump repeatedly criticized the press as biased and "so dishonest ... out of control."[415]
- On February 17, 2017, Trump tweeted: "The FAKE NEWS media (failing @nytimes, @NBCNews, @abc, @CBS, @CNN) is not my enemy, it is the enemy of the American People!"[416]
- On February 24, 2017, President Trump excluded several liberal media organizations from attending a press briefing.[417][418]
- Rather than spend his 100th day in office attending the White House Correspondents Dinner with its left-wing anti-Trump journalists and media figures, Trump went to Pennsylvania to hold a Trump Rally for his supporters.[419][420] Trump became the first president since Reagan in 1981 to skip the dinner.[421]
- On May 17, 2017, under heavy fire from liberals and the mainstream media for controversies regarding James Comey and Russia, Trump, in a commencement speech at the U.S. Coast Guard Academy in New London, Connecticut, criticized the media and made clear that he would stand his ground and not give up. He stated that "I didn’t get elected to serve the Washington media—I got elected to serve the forgotten men and women and that’s exactly what I’m doing."[422][423]
- Rather than holding a press conference after his first foreign trip, President Trump gave a speech to U.S. soldiers.[267]
- June 9, 2017—When President Trump held a press conference with the Romanian prime minister, CNN and The New York Times were assigned seats in the back of the Rose Garden.[424]
Trump's establishment of a massive direct line to the public via social media
Via
Twitter,
Facebook, Instagram, and
YouTube, Trump established a massive direct link to the American public unfiltered by the mainstream media. His social media audience was about 45 million people at the time of his inauguration in January 2017.
[425] Trump has used his social media platform for, among other things, criticizing political correctness and
gun control.
[426]
President Trump himself noted that he could "get the honest and unfiltered message out" through Twitter, and he wrote on the social media site that "if I would have relied on the Fake News of CNN, NBC, ABC, CBS, washpost or nytimes, I would have had ZERO chance winning WH."
[427][428] Although opposed by the
establishment, President Trump's use of Twitter was supported by his base.
[429]
Trump's association with conservative media
Rather than associate with the leftist mainstream media, Trump has associated himself with the
conservative media, particularly
Fox News.
[430] In April 2017, President Trump hosted a media briefing exclusively for conservative media outlets.
[431] He met with libertarian-conservative commentator and conspiracy theorist
Alex Jones in December 2015,
[432][433] becoming the first president to have ever met with Jones according to Jones's website.
[434]
Much to the consternation of liberals and the mainstream media,
[435] the Trump Administration was much more friendly towards and, during press briefings, called more often upon conservative
[436] and smaller
[437] media outlets compared to previous administrations. For example, the first three journalists Press Secretary
Sean Spicer ever called upon during his tenure as secretary were "conservative-leaning" (the
Associated Press traditionally received the first question).
[438] This did not stop the conservative media from asking tough questions to the Trump Administration.
[439][440]
Trump's victory over political correctness
Trump has strongly and successfully challenged
political correctness, particularly during his 2016 presidential campaign. He insisted on using the term "
anchor baby" despite a reporter saying the term was offensive.
[441] He uses the term "Islamic terrorism". He says he will use the words "Merry Christmas".
In June 2017, after an
Islamic terrorist attack in the
United Kingdom, President Trump used his social media platform to call for the end of political correctness.
[442]
Failures and possible failures
- January 31, 2017—President Trump announced he would keep a 2014 executive order signed by former President Obama that gave protected status to homosexual employees of the government and federal contractors.[443][444] Additionally, Ivanka Trump and Jared Kushner reportedly derailed a proposed executive order protecting religious liberty at the same time.[445] However, supporters of homosexual privileges claimed that a March 27, 2017 order, which repealed much of Obama's 2014 executive order, went against Trump's statement to keep the 2014 Obama order (which, if true, would annul this supposed failure).[446]
- February 2, 2017—Trump stated that building new settlements in the West Bank "may not be helpful" to achieving peace in the Middle East, and he appeared to shift his formerly strong stance on moving the U.S. embassy to Jerusalem as he had previously stated.[447]
- President Trump did not sign an executive order ending "no gun zones" on schools early in his presidency as promised.[448]
- February 2017—Despite enacting a crackdown on illegal immigration,[449] President Trump announced he would keep Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA), a program started in 2012 which basically allows illegal immigrants who came to the U.S. as children to stay.[450][451] DHS Secretary John Kelly confirmed this in early-June 2017.[452][453] Through early June 2017, the Trump Administration approved 125,000 new or renewed DACA permits, to the strong dismay of conservatives.[454]
- President Trump and congressional Republicans did not repeal and replace ObamaCare immediately or quickly as promised.[455] They failed to agree on or pass a replacement bill for ObamaCare as a part of 2017 budget reconciliation. They withdrew the bill to avoid losing a vote on the House floor.[456][457] This may not have been a total failure, as polling indicated that only 17% of Americans supported the bill,[458] and its passage would have likely led the GOP to an electoral failure in 2018.[459] Some commentators have stated that Trump used this failure in order to further his agenda in the long run,[460] and Trump himself made clear he was not finished with the issue.[461]
- As of early April 2017, several Obama-holdovers still hold their positions in the Trump Administration with little to no indication of leaving.[462][463] As of March 9, 2017, President Trump has not fired Internal Revenue Service Commissioner John Koskinen, who targeted conservative groups under the Obama Administration.[464] The holdovers in the Customs and Border Protection (CBP) agency engaged in undermining President Trump's agenda of securing the southern border.[465] President Trump also appointed at least one NeverTrump individual to the White House.[466]
- May 10, 2017—By one vote, the U.S. Senate failed to block an Obama-era regulation on drilling through the Congressional Review Act.[467][468]
- It was reported in late-May and early-June 2017 that despite government and media statements to the contrary,[469] the Trump Administration had not made any real change from the Obama Administration's "catch-and-release" policies when apprehending illegal immigrants.[470]
- Due to confirmation delays in the Senate, many leaders of the agencies in charge of border security still had "acting" status well into Trump's presidency, something which prevented agencies from implementing stronger immigration enforcement policies.[471]
- Although President Trump did not proclaim the month of June as "LGBT Pride month," the Pentagon continued its annual "LGBT pride celebration."[472]
Opposition to Donald Trump's achievements
See also: Opposition to Donald Trump and American liberalism and 21st century political losses
Due to his promotion and support of conservative,
America First[473] policies, President Trump faced large opposition from the left and the
establishment,
[474] including from within the government bureaucracy.
[475][476] (The fact that members of the
Deep State have grown visibly scared of reports stating such confirms this view;
[477] in May 2017, it was reported that 60% of
National Security Council employees were Obama-Administration holdovers
[478]). Left-wing federal courts also blocked some of President Trump's executive orders regarding sanctuary cities and immigration.
[479][480]
Even before being inaugurated, Democrats spoke about
impeaching and removing Trump from the presidency.
[481] Even some local communities passed resolutions calling for the impeachment of President Trump.
[482] Some Democrats used profane language against Trump, such as the f-word
[483] and s-word.
[484] As a testament to the deep opposition and hatred towards him by the left-wing, at least 217 violent protestors were arrested in Washington D.C. on Inauguration Day.
[485][486]
In addition to the above, Senate Democrats unduly delayed Trump's cabinet nominees at historic and unprecedented proportions
[487] – by February 8, 2017, only
George Washington had fewer cabinet nominees confirmed by this length of time into his presidency.
[488] Trump's last cabinet secretary was confirmed on April 27, 2017,
[489] and Trump's last cabinet-level member assumed office on May 15, 2017.
[490] In addition to the confirmation delays, congressional Democrats had already (unsuccessfully) filibustered Trump's supreme court nomination and initiated an investigation into Trump's alleged ties to
Russia.
[491]
As in the 2016 presidential election, the
mainstream media strongly opposed Trump and wrote him off as a failure early in his presidency, despite his numerous accomplishments by that time.
[492][493] They consistently misrepresented him and his accomplishments,
[494] As evidence of this intense MSM opposition, a study published close to the 100th-day mark of Trump's presidency found that 89% of media coverage regarding Trump was negative.
[493] A similar study conducted by the Harvard Shorenstein Center on Media, Politics and Public Policy released in May 2017 found that 80% of the mainstream media coverage over Trump (including outlets such as
Fox News Channel and
The Wall Street Journal) was negative.
[495] Additionally, Trump was on track to become the most mocked president on late-night comedy TV in at least 25 years.
[496]
According to a poll taken around the 100th day of Trump's presidency, only 11% of Democrats believed that their party's opposition to Trump had yielded successful results for them.
[497]
President Trump was still able to implement new policies and roll back Obama's policies despite the opposition against him, which served as a distraction from the changes being made.
[498][499]