Los Angeles Times

President’s progress

Trump’s emotional impact on Americans endures despite few concrete victories as he nears 100 days

- By David Lauter

WASHINGTON — As his first 100 days in office draw to a close Saturday, President Trump cannot claim many solid accomplish­ments, but does have one big one: He has held on to the support of the voters who put him in the White House.

Trump has dominated the daily news cycle and conversati­on like few of his predecesso­rs. Questions abound about whether he can manage the White House, sustain focus on a policy debate or set strategy for internatio­nal relations, but he has amply proved he can grab and hold the spotlight.

Partly because of that, his biggest influence so far may be the emotional effect he has had on the country. With Trump on center stage, Republican confidence in the nation’s future and the state of its economy has increased sharply. On the other side of the partisan divide, he has mobilized and energized Democrats to a level not seen in years.

And in many immigrant communitie­s, Trump’s rhetoric has generated fear and anxiety that probably have contribute­d to a drop in the number of people trying to illegally cross the border.

Trump’s substantiv­e impact so far looks small by comparison. Divisions within his party and opposition from Democrats have combined with his own errors to limit his effectiven­ess.

“Trump has focused on winning the short-term news cycle” every day, said UCLA political science professor Lynn Vavreck. “That’s an unusual strategy for

someone governing.”

“Most people who want to be president of the United States have some long-term vision and want to lead to achieve that vision,” but Trump, so far, has not set out that kind of goal, she said.

Despite that, Democrats who believed Trump’s support might crumble quickly have had their hopes dashed by the steadfastn­ess of the president’s backers.

As a result, the opening act of Trump’s presidency has unfolded as a high-decibel stalemate — one that a starkly polarized electorate has watched with rapt fascinatio­n.

Few regrets

A new USC Dornsife/Los Angeles Times “Daybreak” poll provides evidence of both the polarizati­on and the stability of Trump’s support.

Well over 90% of people nationwide who voted for Trump in November said they would do so again.

But in the poll, which in the fall consistent­ly forecast that Trump would win the election, just 40% of Americans approved of his job performanc­e; 46% disapprove­d, and 14% picked neither option.

More than a third, 35%, voiced strong disapprova­l of Trump, compared with 19% who strongly approved of him.

The survey was taken April 12-25 and questioned 3,039 Americans, of whom 2,584 reported voting in the 2016 election. It has a margin of error of 2 percentage points in either direction.

The poll’s findings on Trump’s job approval echo surveys by other news organizati­ons and nonpartisa­n polling groups. All have found approval of the president hovering around 40% — far less than any other elected president at this point in his tenure.

Americans split similarly on whether they liked Trump personally: 37% said they did, and 63% said they didn’t, the poll found. About 1 in 6 of his own voters said they didn’t like Trump personally, but approved of his policies.

In addition to the late April survey, the USC pollsters surveyed people in March. A comparison of the two polls shows something of a paradox: Among Trump’s voters, approval of his job performanc­e has solidified even as doubts about him have begun to creep in.

In the earlier survey, about a third of Trump’s backers offered a wait-andsee answer when asked whether they approved of Trump’s performanc­e in office. By late April, their approval had firmed up, with 85% of those who voted for Trump now saying they approved of his work.

A promise def icit

But when asked whether “keeps his promises” was a phrase that applied to Trump, the results showed increased doubt. Between March and April, the share of Americans who said that Trump does keep his promises fell from 60% to 53%.

Among his own supporters, a significan­t number shifted from saying that keeping his promises “entirely applies” to the president to a more tentative “mostly applies.”

That decline squares with the evidence, if not with Trump’s rhetoric.

The president, in recent comments, has tried to brush aside many campaign promises. Asked in an interview with the Associated Press about the detailed Contract with the American Voter that he released in the closing weeks of the campaign along with a speech in Gettysburg, Pa., Trump sought to distance himself from the pledges.

“Somebody put out the concept of a hundred-day plan,” he said. “I’m mostly there on most items.

“But things change,” he added. “There has to be flexibilit­y.”

In truth, Trump isn’t mostly there. Of 30 major promises he made during his campaign, a survey by The Times found only five that had been fulfilled so far. Many more have been scaled back and a few abandoned outright.

“There are not the usual accomplish­ments presidents like to point to,” said Julia Azari, a political scientist at Marquette University in Wisconsin who studies the presidency.

The president nominated Neil M. Gorsuch, a conservati­ve justice, to the Supreme Court to replace the late Antonin Scalia — a key promise for many of the conservati­ve voters who backed Trump in November. Gorsuch joined the high court this month.

The president formally pulled the U.S. out of the proposed Trans-Pacific Partnershi­p trade deal, a largely symbolic move since the agreement was already doomed in Congress. And he put in place several promised ethics requiremen­ts for his staff, although the White House already has begun giving some people waivers from some of the restrictio­ns.

A sparse record

After that, the record is sparse.

Despite his party’s control of both houses of Congress, and in contrast to the last three presidents, Trump has no big, early legislativ­e accomplish­ments to point to. He has signed a number of bills, but all are small-scale measures, mostly to overturn regulation­s adopted in the final months of the Obama administra­tion.

Many pieces of legislatio­n Trump promised to introduce within his first 100 days remain nowhere in sight.

Divisions among Republican­s in Congress have stymied his efforts to repeal President Obama’s healthcare law, which was a central promise not only of Trump’s campaign, but of all Republican campaigns since the law was passed in 2010.

He promised a major tax overhaul, but his administra­tion has not fleshed out a tax plan, and on Capitol Hill, House and Senate Republican­s disagree sharply on an approach. Trump has ballyhooed a “big announceme­nt” on taxes for this week, probably Wednesday. But administra­tion officials have cautioned that the president will be “outlining principles” for a tax plan, not releasing many specifics.

Trump’s proposal for a $1-trillion plan to increase spending on roads, bridges and other infrastruc­ture also has yet to materializ­e.

White House officials defend the record.

“When you look at the number of pieces of legislatio­n, the executive orders, business confidence, the place — the U.S. role in the world, there’s a lot that we feel — a lot of accomplish­ments that have occurred, and we feel very good about what we’ve done as we head up to this first hundred days,” White House Press Secretary Sean Spicer said Monday.

At the same time, however, Spicer and others have tried to downplay the 100day measure, calling it an “artificial number that gets thrown out.”

There’s little question that other presidents have achieved more in their early days. In 2001, Congress passed President George W. Bush’s major tax cut in May. Obama won approval of his economic stimulus plan within his first 100 days, as well as a number of substantiv­e smaller-scale measures.

One of the biggest factors limiting Trump’s effectiven­ess — especially his ability to put forward ambitious legislativ­e plans — has been his failure to staff key positions in his administra­tion. He often blames Democrats for obstructin­g his nominees, but a much bigger part of the problem has been his own failure to name people.

The nonpartisa­n Partnershi­p for Public Service has been tracking 554 highlevel positions that require Senate confirmati­on. To date, Trump has nominated people for 46 of those, and an additional 35 people have been named but not formally nominated. That’s far behind the pace of Obama, who had nominated nearly 200 by this point, or George W. Bush, who had nominated 85.

Lacking legislativ­e accomplish­ments, Trump has relied heavily on executive orders, signing more in his first 14 weeks than his recent predecesso­rs.

But many of those orders have provided more show than substance. A review by The Times of the first 39 of Trump’s executive orders and presidenti­al memorandum­s found that more than half simply ordered department­s to study policy options and prepare reports.

Stalled in court

The most consequent­ial of the orders — the proposed ban on travel to the U.S. by residents of several majority-Muslim countries — remains stalled in court. Only about a dozen of Trump’s decrees have, so far, changed policy.

Trump has begun the process of rolling back Obama administra­tion regulation­s, especially environmen­tal rules, although much of what he has started will face court challenges.

And the administra­tion has started to toughen immigratio­n enforcemen­t. The number of unauthoriz­ed immigrants who are in federal detention has increased, although only to about the level hit in 2014 before the Obama administra­tion tightened rules on whom immigratio­n officials should target for arrest.

The administra­tion has backed away from several significan­t campaign pledges.

Trump has dropped his call to label China a “currency manipulato­r.” He appears to have dropped his pledge to scrap Obama’s Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program, which shields from deportatio­n about 750,000 young “Dreamers” who came to the U.S. illegally as children. He has taken no steps to undo the Obama administra­tion’s multinatio­nal nuclear deal with Iran or its normalizat­ion of relations with Cuba.

The administra­tion also appears headed toward a much narrower plan to negotiate changes in the North American Free Trade Agreement with Canada and Mexico than what Trump described on the campaign trail.

Moving away from campaign promises is risky for a president, and Trump is no exception. The USC/L.A. Times poll found that Trump voters who believe he has been accomplish­ing what he promised were significan­tly more likely to approve of his job performanc­e than those who said he was accomplish­ing less.

Despite that, Trump’s voters have mostly remained with him.

That’s in keeping with a broader shift in presidenti­al approval that became apparent during the Obama years, Vavreck and Azari noted. Presidenti­al approval used to be driven heavily by events. Bush’s approval, for example, soared after the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, then fell after setbacks in the Iraq war.

Obama’s approval, however, barely budged for most of his eight years in office: Democrats backed him, Re-

‘Trump has focused on winning the short-term news cycle [each day]. That’s an unusual strategy for someone governing.’ LYNN VAVRECK, UCLA political science professor

publicans opposed him, and very few developmen­ts changed minds on either side.

A similarly stubborn polarizati­on has clearly taken hold with Trump, dividing opinions along the now-familiar fault lines of American life.

White Americans in the USC/Times poll approved of Trump’s job performanc­e 50% to 36%, with 14% neutral. Among blacks, only 7% approved and 82% disapprove­d, while among Latinos, 25% approved and 60% disapprove­d.

Asked whether Trump “speaks for people like you,” 53% of whites said he did. Among blacks, only 8% said so; among Latinos, 26%.

Trump gets solid support from voters polled in rural areas, 54% of whom approve of his job performanc­e compared with 31% who disapprove. Among those who live in urban areas, almost the opposite is true: 28% approve, 58% disapprove.

Among Republican­s, 80% said Trump “inspires confidence and optimism.” Among Democrats, only 12% said so.

More than half of Trump voters, 51%, now say they expect their personal financial condition to be better by next year. Before the election, only 29% expressed such optimism. Among Hillary Clinton voters, expectatio­ns have not changed significan­tly: About 4 in 10 think they will see an improvemen­t by next year.

Those opposing groups don’t share the same sources of informatio­n or the same beliefs about the world around them. Roughly two-thirds of Trump voters, for example, said they believed the U.S. homicide rate was at the highest point in 50 years, a staple of Trump’s campaign rhetoric. By contrast, about 6 in 10 Clinton voters did not believe that.

In fact, the homicide rate for the last several years has been lower than at any point since the early 1960s.

When the poll asked about 10 potential sources of informatio­n, only two won the trust of a majority of Trump voters — Fox News and the administra­tion itself. Majorities of Clinton voters expressed trust in a wider range of sources — national and regional newspapers, other cable outlets, public radio and television — but not the two sources believed by Trump voters.

Perhaps the starkest evidence of division is this: Among those who voted for Clinton, 40% said they knew virtually no one who backed Trump; among those who voted for Trump, 45% said they knew virtually no one who voted for Clinton.

 ?? Evan Vucci Associated Press ?? NEIL M. GORSUCH’S swearing-in to the Supreme Court April 10 marked the fulfillmen­t of one of President Trump’s key promises.
Evan Vucci Associated Press NEIL M. GORSUCH’S swearing-in to the Supreme Court April 10 marked the fulfillmen­t of one of President Trump’s key promises.
 ?? Andrew Harnik Associated Press ?? PRESIDENT TRUMP has made up in executive orders for what he’s lacked in legislativ­e wins — signing more than recent predecesso­rs did at this point in their terms. But only about a dozen have changed policy.
Andrew Harnik Associated Press PRESIDENT TRUMP has made up in executive orders for what he’s lacked in legislativ­e wins — signing more than recent predecesso­rs did at this point in their terms. But only about a dozen have changed policy.
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