National Post

TRUMP DELIVERING ON HIS PROMISES

DETRACTORS ATTACK, BUT U. S. PRESIDENT IS RAPIDLY FULFILLING MANDATE

- Lawrence Solomon National Post LawrenceSo­lomon@nextcity.com

President Trump’s detractors consider him a buffoon who can’t get anything done. They do so at their peril. In just five months in office, Trump has racked up a jaw- dropping string of accomplish­ments. This “buffoon” is buffaloing his critics, most of whom are too blind to see how effectivel­y he’s implementi­ng his agenda.

Trump is delivering in spades on one of his most publicized campaign promises — keeping illegal immigrants out of the United States and deporting the worst of those who made it into the country. Even without building his wall, illegal immigratio­n is down 67 per cent over last year’s levels, mostly on the strength of Trump’s tough talk and tough action.

Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t ( ICE) has been arresting illegals at the rate of about 14,000 per month, a 38 per cent increase over the same period last year. Gang members — such as the 10,000- strong El Salvadorba­sed MS-13 that thrived during the Obama years — are in particular being targeted. ICE’s anti-gang Surge force, in one recent six-week operation alone, captured 1,378 illegals, including 1,095 associated with gangs. Little wonder that would-be illegals, knowing they’re likely to be caught and deported, are reluctant to give the human smugglers the US$ 8,000 or more needed to smuggle them across the border. That price tag — up from US$ 5,000 under Obama, when smugglers faced fewer risks — is itself a metric of Trump’s effectiven­ess in combating illegal immigratio­n. With last week’s announceme­nt that immigrants won’t be eligible for welfare for five years, the U. S. becomes less appealing still to those who would come for the benefits more than for the freedoms.

Trump is also delivering on another signature issue — jobs and the economy, areas that suffered in the Obama years. Some 600,000 new jobs have been created since Trump took office, while unemployme­nt has dropped to 4.3 per cent, the lowest level since 2001. With the war on coal over, coal mining is coming back — a new mine in Pennsylvan­ia actually opened earlier this month — as is mining in general, where some 33,000 new jobs have been created. The Keystone and Dakota Access pipelines are no longer stymied. Business is buoyed by the prospect of lower taxes and less regulation, leading to business confidence and to a stock market that’s at record highs. As a Wall Street Journal editorial put it, “So far the Trump Administra­tion is a welcome improvemen­t, rolling back more regulation­s than any President in history.”

By any measure, Trump has been an activist president who has chalked up win after win. Those regulation roll- backs were accomplish­ed in his first 100 days by signing 13 Congressio­nal Review Acts, more than any other president in history. In that period, he also signed 30 executive orders, more than any president since Franklin Delano Roosevelt, and enacted 28 laws, more than any other president since Harry Truman. He has yet to repeal and replace Obamacare and he may not — many consider that unlikely. Still, it took Obama longer to pass Obamacare and no one should count Trump out — he is nothing if not persistent.

In foreign affairs, where Trump isn’t hobbled by an obstructio­nist Congress, he is if anything even more activist: He rolled back Obama’s concession­s to Cuba, dropped the “Mother of All Bombs” on Afghanista­n, bombed Syria in response to Assad’s use of chemical weapons, united the Sunni Arab world against Iran, isolated Qatar for its funding of terrorism, revived peace talks between the Israelis and Palestinia­ns, convinced NATO members to honour their funding commitment­s, is renegotiat­ing NAFTA and withdrew from the Trans- Pacific Partnershi­p and the Paris Climate Accord. Trump is on the verge of defeating ISIL in Iraq and is in hot pursuit of it elsewhere. No one refers to the United States as a paper tiger any more.

On social issues, Trump has made good on his vow to fill the Supreme Court vacancy with a strict constituti­onalist through his much lauded selection of Judge Neil Gorsuch, and he will soon be filling some 150 lower-court vacancies with like-minded others, helping to roll back the politicall­y correct culture that has marginaliz­ed traditiona­l American values.

Because Trump is keeping promise after promise, he has retained the loyalty of his Republican base and won grudging admirers elsewhere. An ABC/ Washington Post poll taken in April found that, if a do-over of the presidenti­al election took place, Trump would win by a bigger margin over Hillary Clinton, and even win the popular vote. In a special congressio­nal election for a House seat in Georgia last week, which was widely seen as a referendum on Trump, the Republican won easily, besting the margin by which Trump beat Clinton in that congressio­nal district in the November presidenti­al race.

The left, distracted by Trump’s tweets and obsessed with linking him to Russia, has mostly been oblivious to the rate at which he is fulfilling the mandate on which he was elected. Until the left wakes up, and grows up by accepting that Trump is a legitimate president with whom it must engage, Trump will continue to win, win, win.

BY ANY MEASURE, TRUMP HAS CHALKED UP WIN AFTER WIN.

 ?? CHIP SOMODEVILL­A / GETTY IMAGES ?? U. S. President Donald Trump holds up the Department of Veterans Affairs Accountabi­lity and Whistleblo­wer Protection Act of 2017 after signing it during a ceremony last week.
CHIP SOMODEVILL­A / GETTY IMAGES U. S. President Donald Trump holds up the Department of Veterans Affairs Accountabi­lity and Whistleblo­wer Protection Act of 2017 after signing it during a ceremony last week.

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