USA TODAY US Edition

President Trump and tax cuts are a success

It is time to give the president a fair shake

- Gary Varvel

White House spokeswoma­n Sarah Huckabee Sanders recently tweeted, “Which is the more underrepor­ted story of @POTUS year one? Defeat of ISIS. Booming Trump economy”

She asked the question for good reason. The good news of Trump’s presidency hasn’t received much attention. According to the Media Research Center, coverage of Trump on the ABC, CBS and NBC evening newscasts in September, October and November was more than 90% negative.

Granted, the president is partially at fault for the lack of positive coverage. At times, he has stepped all over his message. Plus, attacking news reports as “fake news” is not the way to win friends and influence the press.

Trump supporters cry foul, but just like a coach who throws a chair or blasts the media in a news conference, the outburst tends to get more attention than it does wins.

Trumpsters aren’t the only ones who’ve noticed how the media treat Trump. Surprising­ly, 93-year-old former president Jimmy Carter told New

York Times columnist Maureen Dowd: “I think the media have been harder on Trump than any other president certainly that I’ve known about.”

Are Trump’s wins underrepor­ted? Ross Douthat, writing in The Times this month on the ISIS defeat, said “the media is not adequately reporting an important success because it does not fit into the narrative of Trumpian disaster in which our journalist­ic entities are all invested.”

Other Trump wins this year include:

Tax cuts: Congress has passed a tax overhaul, but just the anticipati­on of tax reform, which will cut the corporate rate to 21%, has excited business owners and fueled stock market records.

Economic growth: The gross domestic product has grown by more than 3% for two quarters in a row.

Consumer confidence: In October, consumer confidence rose to the highest level in 17 years, according to the New York-based Conference Board.

Deregulati­on: Trump has cut 67 Obama-era regulation­s and added only three new rules. The rollback has spurred business confidence, economic activity and stock market growth. Trump said the actions have saved $8.1 billion in lifetime net regulatory costs.

Stock market: The Dow has set record highs 70 times this year, rising 5,000 points in a year for the first time in history.

Judicial appointmen­ts: Trump has staffed the judiciary with constituti­onalists such as Supreme Court Justice Neil Gorsuch.

Unemployme­nt: Trump inherited low unemployme­nt from President Obama, but the number of people collecting unemployme­nt benefits has continued to fall to a near 44-year low.

Trade: Trump secured a trade deal with China, Vietnam and South Korea.

Israel: The United States’ relationsh­ip with Israel has been much improved since the last administra­tion.

Immigratio­n: In August, illegal border crossing apprehensi­ons were down 41% on the Southern border compared with August 2016.

U.S. energy: The Keystone XL and Dakota Access pipelines are under constructi­on. Jobs to be created: 42,000.

Coal: Trump stopped Obama’s war on coal.

Climate change: Trump said he will withdraw from the Paris climate change agreement because it would undermine our economy.

Schools: Trump is giving the green light to school choice programs.

Obamacare: The new tax law repeals its individual mandate.

Of course, the left credits Obama for ISIS’ defeat and the booming economy. And Obama recently thanked himself for economic growth and job creation in a speech to mayors in Chicago.

Actually, he deserves some credit. His policies created a slow recovery, which forced businesses to get lean. Trump has removed the regulatory weight and the economy is soaring.

Trump’s combative style reminds me of a certain three-time national champion basketball coach from Indiana. But like that coach, Trump has more wins than losses.

Gary Varvel is a cartoonist and columnist for The Indianapol­is Star, where this column first appeared.

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