Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Trump’s first week full of action, drama

- By DEBRA SAUNDERS

WASHINGTON — Hang on, friend. This is going to be a bumpy ride.

President Donald Trump’s first full work week began with action and drama. Trump had planned to assume office with executive orders that showed his commitment to making good on key campaign promises. He delivered.

In his first three days, Trump signed executive orders to peel back Obamacare regulation­s, expedite environmen­tal reviews for federal infrastruc­ture projects, build a wall along the U.S.-Mexican border and withhold federal funding from “sanctuary cities.” In addition, Trump signed memoranda to withdraw the United States from the Trans-Pacific Partnershi­p, resurrecte­d the Keystone pipeline, froze the hiring of civilian employees, and banned federal aid to internatio­nal organizati­ons that support or perform abortions. Trump closed the week signing an executive order temporaril­y suspending the issuance of visas for refugees from seven Muslim-majority countries.

In addition, the new president met with leaders from both parties in Congress as well as business titans and labor representa­tives.

“On some level,” Reno communicat­ions consultant Karen Hanretty observed, Trump’s efforts to reach across the aisle and mix with the organizati­ons not usually associated with the GOP disprove “the ongoing theme” that Trump is “divisive.”

Yet while much of Washington spent the week marveling at many things Trump was doing, his odd statements, and those of spokesman Sean Spicer, also had observers questionin­g just exactly what Trump thought he was doing.

Over the weekend, Trump apparently sent Spicer out to scold the press for not recognizin­g that Trump drew “the largest audience to ever witness an inaugurati­on — period — both in person and around the globe.”

Monday morning dawned with beltway mavens speculatin­g whether Spicer would or should last in his new job after that damaging hit to his credibilit­y.

(In his first real press briefing Monday, Spicer redeemed himself and his career when he admitted Trump did not draw the largest crowd ever to the Washington Mall.)

Then Monday night Trump told someone at a bipartisan congressio­nal leadership meeting that he would have won the election but for unsubstant­iated fraud committed by millions voting illegally.

Later reporters demanded to know if Trump would launch an investigat­ion given the seriousnes­s of the charges.

Voter fraud became the media chew toy of the week. (Trump suggested he would order an investigat­ion, but he had failed to do so by Friday evening.)

House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi told reporters, “I felt sorry for him. I even prayed for him. But then I prayed for the United States of America.”

Thursday, Spicer dangled the idea of a tax on Mexican imports to fund the border wall during a gaggle; the press spent the afternoon trying to figure out if Trump was going to start a tariff war or back a different tax. (Spicer later walked back his comment.) Meanwhile, Mexican President Enrique Peña Nieto pulled out of a summit planned for this week.

“It seems like there’s been some unnecessar­y distractio­n,” noted Hanretty, a Trump voter. “At the same time, if you’re willing to look past the tweets and the press room brouhaha, at the end of the day, he’s delivering. That alone is astounding.”

After all the chatter and rumbling, Trump ended the week on an up note. His joint press conference with British Prime Minister Theresa May showed voters an executive mindful of America’s “special relationsh­ip” with the United Kingdom. May showed she was no pushover when she announced that Trump had told her he was “100 percent behind NATO.” Both leaders pledged to serve overlooked working taxpayers.

Trump showed he could be flexible when he reaffirmed that, while he believed enhanced interrogat­ion techniques work, he nonetheles­s would defer to Secretary of Defense James Mattis and others who object to using them.

The Friday press conference also showed an endearing side to Trump. Asked how May and he would get along, Trump answered, “How the relationsh­ip works out, I won’t be able to tell you that (until) later. I’ve had many times I thought I’d get along with people and I don’t like them at all. And I’ve had some where I didn’t think I was going to have much of a relationsh­ip and it turned out to be a great relationsh­ip. So, Theresa, we never know about those things, do we?”

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