National Post (National Edition)

TRUMP MAKES RETURN TO SCENE OF HIS VICTORY

‘IF NOTHING HAPPENS IN TWO YEARS HE’S A PHONEY LIKE THE REST OF THEM’

- NICK ALLEN The Daily Telegraph The Washington Post

in Monessen, Penn.

One hundred days after Donald Trump became President of the United States, very little appears to have changed in Monessen, a beleaguere­d former steel town in rural Pennsylvan­ia. Until, that is, you step into the mayor's office.

“I've done it, I've finally sold City Hall!” exclaims Lou Mavrakis, 75, hopping out of his chair like a Jack-in-thebox. “It's the Trump effect. That's what 100 days means to me.”

During the election campaign, Mavrakis was mired in gloom. He had long been trying to sell the four-storey concrete building in a bid to help plug Monessen's $13.5-million debt. But no one wanted to invest in a decaying city.

“It's the real deal, someone's bought it to turn into a cancer therapy centre,” Mavrakis said. “People will come from everywhere. That means hotels, restaurant­s, jobs. This is happening because of Trump. He put places like this on the map.

“Nothing had happened in this goddamn place for decades, but after what's happened in the last couple of months I'm optimistic.”

Monessen used to be home to 30,000 people, employing 8,000 in the now defunct Wheeling-Pittsburgh Steel mill. There are now fewer than 7,500 residents left. Derelict homes and shops are everywhere.

During the election Mavrakis, a lifelong Democrat and steel union official, asked Trump to come to see the blight for himself. He did. Hillary Clinton never answered the mayor's letter.

Westmorela­nd County, in which the town sits, subsequent­ly delivered the most votes for Trump of any county in the key state of Pennsylvan­ia. He demolished Clinton by 116,427 to 59,506 and snatched a state she thought was hers. To mark 100 days in power, Trump returned to the scene of the upset Saturday night for a rally in Harrisburg, a couple of hours away.

In Monessen, nearly 1,000 Democrats switched sides and for these “Trump Democrats” there is no buyers' remorse.

Orest Cieply, 53, still a registered Democrat, went from being a Bernie Sanders supporter to backing Trump.

“I'm enthused. Towns like ours get missed and what Trump's done is start boosting morale in areas like this. The tax cuts will create income, illegal immigratio­n is down, he's cutting regulation, so the jobs will come back. And I love what he's doing (in) standing up to North Korea.

“Hillary had a high and mighty attitude and she snubbed her nose at us, saying she'd put coal miners out of work.”

National polls suggest Trump supporters are standing by their man, despite approval ratings that, at 40 per cent, mark a historic low for a president at this early stage of his tenure. A survey published by the University of Virginia last week showed Trump still had a 93-per-cent approval rating among respondent­s who voted for him in November.

The Daily Telegraph spoke to five Trump voters in Monessen who graded the president on his first 100 days. Four gave him a “B” and one a “B-”. The minus was for not being tougher on a recalcitra­nt Congress that blocked his repeal of Obamacare.

One man, a 63-year-old retired computer worker, said: “We were just tired of what was going on in Washington. Trump was the great hope. Trump was change. And that stills stands.”

A 65-year-old retired warehouse worker, a Democrat who voted for Trump, said: “For me it was ‘did I want a braggart or a liar in office?' I went for the braggart and I think he's doing a good job. He's working towards his promises on immigratio­n and tax reform. The stock market has confidence in him and so do I. He's a stand-up guy.”

Andrew Lane, 37, a labourer and Trump voter, said: “He's taking a beating from Congress and the liberals unfortunat­ely. Anything he wants to do they're trying to stop him. But the economy's going to get better and hopefully some of that money will get dumped on mill towns like here.”

A stroll down Monessen's main street shows just how much that money is needed. The Royal Tea Garden Chinese restaurant has been derelict for a decade. At O'Toole's, a computer repair shop abandoned eight years ago, the owner's glasses still sit on the counter gathering dust. Even the pawn shop shut down years ago.

Mavrakis has convinced a developer to take on the biggest eyesore on the main street, a former department store empty since 1997. It will be turned into apartments. Another developer is revamping six of the town's 400 derelict homes.

“Everyone's expecting the goose that laid the golden egg,” said Mavrakis. “I want to see results too, but you have to give the guy a year. If nothing happens in two years then he's a phoney just like the rest of them.

“What we do know is that Congress hasn't learned a goddamn thing. If Trump isn't successful in four years, because of Congress, you're going to have a riot. I'm talking violence, mark my words.” understand how this is at all possible. Neverthele­ss, as we have seen, it is quite possible indeed.”

He wasn't the only one who drew comparison­s between the harsh suggested prison sentence and Stalin's Russia. While prosecutor­s and others have justified Sokolovsky's arrest under a new law that prevents the “violation of the right to freedom of conscience and belief,” others have blasted the potential punishment — and the law — as a restrictio­n on free speech.

“Previously #Russia jailed people for mocking Communism/Stalin, now for mocking Orthodoxy,” Moscow Times reporter Matthew Kupfer tweeted.

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