The Herald

Trump sets new tone as he outlines his priorities

President in plea to ‘join forces to get the jobdoneand get it done right’

- JULIE PACE WASHINGTON

DONALD TRUMP has issued a broad call for overhaulin­g the nation’s health care and boosting military spending, swapping his trademark pugnacious­ness and personal insults for a more restrained tone as he addressed Congress for the first time.

Heralding a “new chapter of American greatness, the President said: “The time for small thinking is over.”

He still employed dark language to describe the threat posed by “radical Islamic terrorism” – a term his own national security adviser rejects as inflammato­ry – and warned against “reckless” and “uncontroll­ed entry” of refugees and immigrants from countries with ties to extremist groups.

Mr Trump’s overall message on immigratio­n, one of his signature campaign issues, was unexpected­ly mixed.

He said “real and positive immigratio­n reform is possible” and had suggested to news anchors earlier that he was open to legislatio­n that could provide a pathway to legal status for some of the millions of people living in the US illegally.

In his hour-long address, Mr Trump defended his early actions in office and ignored the missteps that have set even his allies in Washington on edge.

He was unusually measured and embraced the pomp and tradition of a presidenti­al address to Congress, and outlined a populist agenda centred on promises to compel companies to bring manufactur­ing jobs back to the US.

The President was greeted by enthusiast­ic applause as he entered the House chamber. Most Republican legislator­s have rallied around him since the election, hopeful that he will act on the domestic priorities they saw blocked during Barack Obama’s eight years in office.

Topping that list is undoing Mr Obama’s signature health care law. Mr Trump offered a basic blueprint of his priorities, including ensuring that those with pre-existing conditions have access to coverage, allowing people to buy insurance across state lines and offering tax credits and expanded health savings accounts to help Americans purchase coverage.

He suggested he would get rid of the requiremen­t that all Americans carry insurance coverage, saying that “mandating every American to buy government-approved health insurance was never the right solution for America”.

Making a direct appeal for bipartisan­ship, he turned to Democrats and said: “Why not join forces to finally get the job done and get it done right?” Democrats sat silently as Republican­s stood and cheered.

Delivering the Democrats’ formal response after the speech, former Kentucky governor Steve Beshear accused Mr Trump of planning to “rip affordable health insurance” from Americans and being “Wall Street’s champion”.

The President was vague in his call for tax reform, another Republican priority.

He promised “massive tax relief for the middle class” and a reduction in corporate tax rates, but glossed over how he would offset the cuts.

The President also urged Congress to pass a trillion-dollar (£800 billion) infrastruc­ture package financed through public and private capital. “The time has come for a new programme of national rebuilding,” he said.

First Lady Melania Trump sat with special guests on hand to amplify the President’s agenda, including the wife of Chief Special Warfare Operator William “Ryan” Owens who was killed in a special operations in Yemen last month.

The widow of ex-Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia also sat alongsideM­rsTrump,aremindero­fthePresid­ent’s well-received nomination of federal appeals court Judge Neil Gorsuch to fill Judge Scalia’s seat.

The majority of Mr Trump’s address centred on the domestic, economic-focused issues at the centre of his presidenti­al campaign. His national security message centred largely on a call for significan­tly boosting military spending and taking strong but unspecifie­d measures to protect the nation from “radical Islamic terrorism”.

 ??  ?? APPLAUSE: For Donald Trump from Vice-President Mike Pence and House Speaker Paul Ryan.
APPLAUSE: For Donald Trump from Vice-President Mike Pence and House Speaker Paul Ryan.
 ??  ?? TEARS: From Carryn Owens, widow of Chief Special Warfare Operator William ‘Ryan’ Owens who was killed in Yemen last month, as she was acknowledg­ed by Mr Trump. First Lady Ivana Trump and daughter Ivanka look on.
TEARS: From Carryn Owens, widow of Chief Special Warfare Operator William ‘Ryan’ Owens who was killed in Yemen last month, as she was acknowledg­ed by Mr Trump. First Lady Ivana Trump and daughter Ivanka look on.
 ??  ?? AUTOGRAPH: Mr Trump signs for representa­tive.
AUTOGRAPH: Mr Trump signs for representa­tive.

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