The Pak Banker

A newly emboldened Trump gives Democrats a reason to fret

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President Donald Trump took the stage for his State of the Union speech in an unfamiliar position: With the wind at his back. For most of his three years in office, Trump has been surrounded by tumult, much of it of his own making, resulting ultimately in his impeachmen­t by the House of Representa­tives. Now, for the first time in a long time, things are looking up.

He is on the verge of being acquitted by his fellow Republican­s in the U.S. Senate on Wednesday. Opinion polls show his approval ratings on an upswing. And the Democratic presidenti­al nomination race was consumed by chaos as results from the Iowa caucuses this week were delayed by a full day because the mobile app used to record the results had a coding problem. For Trump, the timing could not be better.

Despite being impeached, he is firmly entrenched in office, after surviving the Mueller investigat­ion into Russian electoral interferen­ce and accusation­s that he abused his office by pressuring Ukraine to investigat­e a political rival, former vice president Joe Biden. “He has had existentia­l political threats facing him from the moment he was elected until tomorrow,” said Texas-based Republican consultant Matt Mackowiak, referring to the impending acquittal vote on impeachmen­t charges.

All of it brought out the showman in the former reality TV star during his State of the Union speech on Tuesday night. At one point, he choreograp­hed a reunion between a U.S. servicemem­ber returning from Afghanista­n and his family to cheers from lawmakers. Along that line, for much of the speech, Trump appeared to be making an overt appeal to suburban voters who could decide his fate.

He spoke of child-care initiative­s, and efforts to combat AIDS and the opioid crisis. He called for greater transparen­cy for medical bills, and he sought to take credit for protecting Americans with pre-existing healthcare conditions, even though his administra­tion supports a lawsuit that would gut the Affordable Care Act. Trump also touted bipartisan accomplish­ments such as the U.S.-Mexico-Canada trade deal and vowed to protect entitlemen­t programs such as Medicare and Social Security. He pledged to protect the public from the coronaviru­s that is spreading in China and beyond.

But lest anyone think the combustibl­e Trump had turned touchy-feely, he also reassured his hardline supporters by previewing what promises to be a recurrent campaign theme: accusing Democrats of supporting unlimited free healthcare to undocument­ed immigrants. As he did during his first presidenti­al campaign, he warned of the dangers of socalled “Sanctuary Cities” and detailed incidents of violent crime committed by border-crossers.

Trump, too, seemed eager to exploit divisions among Democrats as they struggle to settle on a candidate who could mount the biggest threat to him. The early favorite, Biden, appeared to have stumbled badly in Iowa, while U.S. Senator Bernie

Sanders, a democratic socialist, was much more competitiv­e.

At one point, Trump appeared to reference Sanders, who favors a government-run healthcare system, by declaring “We will never let socialism destroy American healthcare!”

At a campaign event in New Hampshire, Sanders drew a laugh from the crowd on Tuesday when he questioned Trump’s pledge to improve healthcare in America: “Really? How gullible do you think the American people are?” he said.

In his speech to Congress, Trump did not address the most polarizing topic in the room, the months-long attempt by Democrats to remove him from office. He avoided any temptation to take a victory lap ahead of Wednesday’s Senate vote.

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