Trump looks to steady ship after fraught start

Trump looks to steady ship after fraught start

January 24, 2017
US President Donald Trump speaks, as Vice President Mike Pence watches, before the swearing in of the White House senior staff at the White House in Washington, D.C., on Friday. — AFP
US President Donald Trump speaks, as Vice President Mike Pence watches, before the swearing in of the White House senior staff at the White House in Washington, D.C., on Friday. — AFP

WASHINGTON — US President Donald Trump gets down to work on Monday, signing a slew of executive orders to start rolling out his policy agenda after a tumultuous start put his administration on the back foot.

Embarking on his first full week in office, the 45th US president will try to steady the ship, seeking support from lawmakers, business leaders and unions at the White House.

Since he was sworn in on Friday Trump’s White House has been pilloried for lying to the public about crowds at the inauguration, and the president himself for making a campaign-style speech before a memorial to fallen CIA officers.

Some two million Americans poured into the streets for women-led demonstrations, the scale of which were unseen in a generation.

“Why didn’t these people vote? Celebs hurt cause badly,” Trump tweeted angrily on Sunday morning.

An hour later, adopting a more conciliatory tone, he noted “peaceful protests are a hallmark of our democracy.”

“Even if I don’t always agree,” he said, “I recognize the rights of people to express their views.”

Trump aides say the next week will see a steady if not daily drip of executive actions designed to get back to Trump’s agenda.

Already there have been moves to roll-back President Barack Obama’s health care reforms and freeze some regulations in the pipeline.

On Sunday Trump vowed to swiftly start renegotiating the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) with Canada and Mexico.

But reality has also bitten.

A pledge to move the US embassy in Israel from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem has been put on the back burner for now.

More quick legal tweaks — in the form of executive orders — are expected on immigration and limiting environmental legislation.

But more substantive changes will need buy-in from the Republican controlled Congress.

On Monday, Trump was expected to host separate meetings with business leaders, unions and members of both houses of Congress. He was also scheduled to meet the speaker of the House of Representatives, Paul Ryan.

Tax reform is likely to be high on the agenda.

Some in Congress want to lower the corporate tax rate to 20 percent and pay for it by ending tax breaks on imports.

That is likely to come up against fierce opposition from big retailers who depend on cheap imports and could well run up against WTO rules.

Reform of Obama’s health care laws is also likely to be on the menu.

Republicans are keen to repeal the law, but are less united on what should replace it.

Trump has publicly promised that none of the tens of millions of Americans who obtained health insurance under Obama will lose it.

That makes any meaningful changes difficult to pay for.

Trump will also need to win support for some of his cabinet nominees who have yet to be confirmed.

His picks for the CIA — Mike Pompeo — and the State Department — Rex Tillerson — now appear to have enough votes in Congress to pass, but others are less certain. But the more urgent task for Trump may be to keep always skeptical establishment Republicans on board the “Trump train.”


January 24, 2017
HIGHLIGHTS