Sun.Star Cebu

The 45th POTUS

The question now is will he, or can he, deliver? Those who voted for him believe, or at least hope, that Trump can deliver

- IGNACIO R. BUNYE totingbuny­e2000@gmail.com

Donald Trump campaigned on a promise of real change. (Sounds Dutertisti­c?) The message resonated with the “forgotten men” and the “forgotten women” who apparently did enough to get more than the electoral votes required to elect Trump the 45th President of the United States.

It was one of the most divisive campaigns in recent US history. But Trump promises to heal all that. On the eve of his inaugurati­on, he told supporters it is “time for us to come together as one united people.”

He also made a bold promise: “We are going to do things that have not been done for our country for many, many decades.”

Going by his campaign slogans and promises, here is what “Trumpanomi­cs” proposes to achieve:

--Create 25 millions of new jobs over ten years and reverse industrial decline. (Huh? His term is only four years. )

--Bring jobs back to America. Be tough on countries taking away jobs from Americans.

--Bring back American cash parked offshore. (The cash has actually started to return because of the recent increase in FED interest rate.)

--Double economic growth. (He is inheriting from President Barack Obama an economy that is actually on the mend.)

--Renegotiat­e the North American Free Trade Agreement (Nafta).

--Slap a 45 percent tariff on Chinese goods, a 35 percent tariff on Mexican goods. (And spark and trade war?)

--Make the US military the most powerful in the world. (Marching order from the incoming Commander-in-Tweet.) --Build a wall to keep off illegal migrants. --Cut corporate taxes from 35 to 15 per cent. --Cut red tape by 70 per cent. --Abolish Obamacare. The question now is will he, or can he, deliver? Those who voted for him believe, or at least hope, that Trump can deliver.

Detractors brand Trump’s rhetorics are pure grandstand­ing. They further lament that millions of Americans were caught up in the lies and promises peddled by Trump. Billionair­e George Soros labeled Trump an “impostor.”

An enterprisi­ng restaurant owner came up with a new dish -- a huge, several-layered hamburger sandwich which he calls the Trump Burger. Depending on which side of the political fence they are on, observers believe that the Trump Burger is truly representa­tive of Trump. To supporters, the burger is “larger than life.” Detractors, however, find the burger “difficult to swallow.”--

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