The Palm Beach Post

Trump’s priorities are clear: Business people never

Fifirst,

- By Sam Berger Sam Berger is the senior policy adviser at the Center for American Progress and previously served as a senior policy adviser on the White House Domestic Policy Council during the Obama administra­tion. He wrote this for InsideSour­ces.com.

Signifific­ant media attention has been devoted to the failure of President Donald Trump’s health care proposal, which would take coverage away from 24 million people in order to provide billions in tax breaks to the rich. Far less attention, however, has been paid to the actual legislativ­e accomplish­ments of Trump’s fifirst 100 days in offiffice — and the hard numbers behind them.

While Trump campaigned on a pledge of making the GOP the “party of the American worker,” in reality he has repeatedly passed bills that put the interests of Big Business ahead of hardworkin­g families. More than Trump’s words, looking to his legislativ­e actions can tell us about his real priorities and those of congressio­nal Republican­s.

In Trump’s fifirst 100 days, he and Congress have quietly passed 13 bills repealing protection­s that covered everything from worker safety to internet privacy. But the efffffffff­fffects of these bills — the entirety of Trump’s legislativ­e accomplish­ments to date — cannot be hidden.

When agencies put protection­s into place, they have to explain to the public why the rules are necessary and support their conclusion­s with hard data. The resulting data, analyzed by the Center for American Progress, has painted a stark picture of Trump’s priorities: $7 billion in giveaways for major corporatio­ns over the next decade, but a net loss of jobs, millions of dollars less for workers due to reduced wages, and the eliminatio­n of important consumer protection­s for everyone.

Oil, gas and mining companies will be major benefifici­aries of Trump’s legislatio­n, reaping billions of dollars from the repeal of key protection­s preventing toxic pollution in our streams and limiting foreign corruption. Another major benefifici­ary will be law-breaking federal contractor­s, who will not have to let the government know about their violations of labor law before winning federal contracts worth hundreds of billions of dollars in total.

Far from creating jobs and boosting wages, these changes will, on an annual basis, lead to job loss, reduce worker pay by $3 million, and cause $57 million in increased costs as a result of higher carbon- dioxide emissions.

Further, it’s impossible to capture — in numerical terms — the full efffffffff­fffect of Trump’s actions over the fifirst 100 days on Americans, even though the loss of these protection­s will afffffffff­fffect people in every corner of the country, every day.

For example, Trump and Congress have passed a bill allowing internet service providers to sell your browser history to third parties without your consent. They also eliminated a rule that would protect access to family planning services, meaning more unintended pregnancie­s and worse health outcomes for those seeking care. And by getting rid of another rule that protected streams from mountainto­p mining, they increased the risk of toxic pollutants in drinking water.

Trump’s disregard for the interests of everyday Americans is even clearer when compared with President Barack Obama’s fifirst 100 days in offiffice. Obama put hardworkin­g families at the center of his 100-day agenda. One of his fifirst acts as president was to restore protection­s against pay discrimina­tion. He also signed the American Recovery and Reinvestme­nt Act, which increased employment by almost 2.5 million people at its peak, provided more than $180 billion in tax cuts for middle- and working-class families, and included $300 billion in public investment­s. And he signed legislatio­n that helped more than a million low-income children receive health coverage, providing parents greater peace of mind knowing they could pay their children’s health bills.

You can learn a lot about a president’s priorities over the fifirst 100 days of his or her administra­tion, the things a president takes action on and the things a president sets aside. And for Trump, the numbers don’t lie: Time and time again, he has signed legislatio­n that helps Big Business and special interests, while hurting everyone else.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States