Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Can Trump keep promises?

He has guaranteed results, swift action

- ALLISON GRAVES AND AARON SHAROCKMAN POLITIFACT

President-elect Donald Trump promised coal jobs in West Virginia and manufactur­ing jobs in Michigan. He said he would fix the inner city of Baltimore and the airports in New York. He said he would cut taxes and grow the military. Create paid family leave and balance the budget.

Build the wall. Kill Obamacare.

Protect Social Security. Take care of veterans. And that’s just the start. “We’re going to win so much, you’re going to be so sick and tired of winning, you’re going to come to me and go ‘Please, please, we can’t win anymore.’ ... You’ll say ‘Please, Mr. President, we beg you sir, we don’t want to win anymore. It’s too much. It’s not fair to everybody else,’ ” Trump said in Montana last May. “And I’m going to say ‘I’m sorry, but we’re going to keep winning, winning, winning. We’re going to make America great again.’ ”

The pitch worked. Now comes the hard part: Can Trump deliver?

For the past six months, PolitiFact National has been cataloging promises Trump made

to voters in speeches, appearance­s, interviews and debates. This week, it launched the Trump-O-Meter, which will track 102 of the most significan­t pledges emblematic of his unconventi­onal campaign. It’s the same process PolitiFact used to track the campaign promises made by President Barack Obama.

While Obama’s promises often were hyperspeci­fic (e.g., “Better integrate efforts of federal agencies with the military through new Mobile Developmen­t Teams”), Trump’s are sweeping.

That brings additional challenges.

“An unsuccessf­ul foreign or military engagement, a natural disaster, failed diplomacy, a spike in gas prices, a stock market crisis or any of the other factors that bedevil every president can easily befall Trump,” said veteran Republican strategist Rick Wilson, who opposed Trump during the campaign. “These are externalit­ies that no amount of bluster, tweeting and red hats immunize a president against.”

The 102 promises on the Trump-O-Meter account for the major tenets of Trump’s tax and immigratio­n plans, his ideas to repeal and replace Obamacare and his proposals to shift American trade policy. Plenty of his ideas will find opposition from the Republican-controlled Congress. In some cases, Trump’s promises will be difficult to keep.

Yet Trump has guaranteed results and promised swift action. On his first day in office, Trump has vowed to withdraw from the Trans-Pacific Partnershi­p trade agreement, eliminate gun-free zones, rescind executive orders on guns and immigratio­n, cancel federal funding to sanctuary cities, start work on the border wall, begin deporting undocument­ed immigrants with criminal records, suspend immigratio­n from terror-prone countries and ask Congress to repeal the Affordable Care Act.

Beyond that, he has promised to fix America’s inner cities, double America’s rate of economic growth, put millions of people to work and rebuild the country’s highways, bridges, tunnels, airports, schools and hospitals.

To conservati­ve National Review columnist Jonah Goldberg, it’s “unicorns as far as the eye can see.”

“He essentiall­y vowed that we could rewind the movie of the last 50 years. Lost jobs would come flying back like the pieces of a shattered vase reassembli­ng as the video plays in reverse,” Goldberg wrote. “That won’t happen. It won’t happen because Trump must now deal with the tools and materials of the real world.”

Decipherin­g Trump’s rhetoric

There’s a difficulty in tracking Trump’s promises because his words can be contradict­ory or unclear.

Take his promise to ban Muslims from entering the country. In the weeks before the Iowa caucus, Trump pledged that he would halt all Muslim immigratio­n to the United States. But during the general election, Trump said he would ban immigratio­n from regions with a history of terrorism.

Both ideas remain on his website, so PolitiFact decided to track both promises.

Likewise, at the start of the campaign, Trump said all 11 million people living in the country illegally “have to go.” Later in the campaign, he focused on people living in the country illegally who have committed crimes.

Again, PolitiFact will track both promises.

In coal country, Trump vowed to reverse a decadeslon­g trend and put miners back to work.

In the rust belt, he pledged manufactur­ing jobs.

How will he accomplish either? Details are slim. Trump has said he plans to unleash the American economy by creating an environmen­t better for business. That means lower tax rates and fewer regulation­s.

Dan Mitchell, an economist with the libertaria­n Cato Institute, said the proposals will make the United States more attractive to businesses. But, on the specifics, experts say it will be hard for Trump to meet the letter of his word. We spoke with eight economists. None predicted a major spike in new manufactur­ing or mining jobs.

The promises PolitiFact is analyzing on the Trump-O-Meter include promises Trump already has indicated he won’t keep, including his vow to appoint a special prosecutor to investigat­e Hillary Clinton.

Trump told a crowd in California in June that if he won his “attorney general will take a very good look” at Clinton’s case. In August, in Ohio, Trump said Clinton’s case “required” a special prosecutor. At the second presidenti­al debate in St. Louis, Trump said he would “instruct my attorney general to get a special prosecutor to look into” Clinton’s situation. And the next day, in Pennsylvan­ia, he said, “Special prosecutor, here we come.”

But Trump told The New York Times after the election that he doesn’t “want to hurt the Clintons, I really don’t.”

We will still track the promise, however, because it is something Trump promised voters ahead of election day.

Cost of the wall and who’s footing the bill

The Trump-O-Meter also will track Trump’s signature pledge to build a wall along the U.S.-Mexico border. The question is who will pay and when.

Trump said the wall would either cost $8 billion or $12 billion. He said it would be 35 to 40 feet or 50 feet, or higher.

Without precise plans, it’s hard to determine how much it would cost. Fencing, hardly a great “impenetrab­le and beautiful” wall, may cost at least $5.1 billion. Some estimates stretch to $25 billion.

The “build the wall!” chants also skipped past the fine print in his plan — that Mexico would be asked to reimburse the United States for the cost to build the wall. Until then, the bill appears headed to the American taxpayer.

Long odds

Trump promised to reinstate waterboard­ing, a controvers­ial interrogat­ion technique that simulates drowning and is considered torture, even though his own pick to lead the Department of

Defense, retired Gen. James Mattis, said beer and cigarettes are more effective methods of extracting informatio­n.

He vowed to move the U.S. embassy in Israel to Jerusalem, though other presidents have broken the same promise in hopes it could save Middle East peace talks.

Trump claimed in an interview with Bob Woodward that he would eliminate the $19 trillion federal debt within eight years, even though experts say his economic plan would actually increase the debt by trillions.

He promised to adopt the “penny plan” to reduce nondefense, non-entitlemen­t spending by 1% per year, though he also has said he would spend at least $550 billion improving America’s infrastruc­ture system.

PolitiFact has been tracking the promises of presidents, governors and mayors for nearly nine years and no one has achieved everything pledged to voters.

Nearly one in four of Obama’s campaign promises, for instance, ended up broken, according to our Obameter. In some cases, new events necessitat­ed a change in priority. In others, Congress got in the way.

What he can do, where he needs help

The Trump-O-Meter will rate outcomes, not intentions, the same standard we used for Obama. So it’s not enough for Trump to propose, as he has, six weeks of paid family leave for new mothers. It’s up to him to see the legislatio­n through the Republican­led Congress.

Some promises Trump can pursue unilateral­ly.

He can keep the prison facility in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, operating without lifting a finger, and he can force a move

of the U.S. embassy in Israel to Jerusalem.

Trump already has celebrated a campaign promise to keep a Carrier air conditioni­ng factory open in Indiana (though jobs are still moving to Mexico).

Trump also has promised to issue an executive order mandating the death penalty for anyone convicted of killing a police officer. He has the ability to issue the order, but presidents do not have the authority to create penal laws, experts say. That requires Congress.

And in the case of the death penalty, the Supreme Court ruled that mandatory death penalty sentences are unconstitu­tional.

But in many cases, Trump will find himself in an unfamiliar position as the CEO-turned-president: at the mercy of others.

Trump’s tax plan, a simplifyin­g of the tax code and lower rates for many but not all, needs the support of Congress. He is likely to have a willing partner.

Trump’s dream of congressio­nal term limits requires an amendment to the Constituti­on. That means the approval of two-thirds of the House and Senate and the ratificati­on of 38 state legislatur­es. The last amendment to the Constituti­on, dealing with congressio­nal pay, took 202 years to ratify.

Trump told voters during the campaign he would “make every dream you ever dreamed for your country come true.”

Starting Friday, we’ll find out. Allison Graves and Aaron Sharockman are reporters for PolitiFact.com. The Journal Sentinel’s PolitiFact Wisconsin is part of the PolitiFact network.

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