Rome News-Tribune

The state of President Trump

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The president’s State of the Union speech Tuesday night resembled a campaign rally. Some Republican­s shouted “four more years” as he approached the lectern. Democrats mostly looked glum, shook their heads, pursed their lips, laughed in response to some of his remarks and in the case of Speaker Nancy Pelosi appeared to be talking to herself. At the end, she tore up her copy of the address, and Trump refused to acknowledg­e her before stepping down from the platform.

This was more than a victory lap for the president. It was a celebratio­n of all he and Republican­s have accomplish­ed the last three years. The latest Gallup poll reflects the public’s recognitio­n of those achievemen­ts with 49% of those polled approving the president’s performanc­e, up 10 points since November. Yes, 50% still disapprove of him, but based on what? It can’t be the economy, which he again touted as strong and getting stronger.

According to Gallup, 63% approve of his economic policies.

Mr. Trump made a strong case for school choice, putting a face on “failing government schools” by introducin­g a young African American girl and her mother from Pennsylvan­ia. The governor, he said, recently vetoed an Opportunit­y Scholarshi­p bill, but the president said he was offering her a scholarshi­p so she and her mother could choose a better school.

There was the dramatic moment when the president brought back from Afghanista­n Sergeant First Class Townsend Williams, who had been on his fourth tour, and reunited him with his wife, Amy, and their two children. Tears flowed.

Speaking of tears, when was the last time you saw radio talk show host Rush Limbaugh cry?

He did as he received from Melania Trump the Presidenti­al Medal of Freedom. Limbaugh announced on Monday he has advanced lung cancer.

Many Democrats refused to applaud. This is what hate does to some people.

The president directly and indirectly got in digs at Democrats, including former President Barack Obama, by noting the millions he said had been removed from welfare and food stamp rolls. “Since my election, we have created 7 million new jobs,” Trump said, “taking credit for thousands of jobs created after the election but while Barack Obama was still president,” according to Factcheck. org. “The most recent figures show that in the 35 months after Trump actually took office, the economy added just under 6.7 million jobs.”

In another of his many pro-life statements, the president introduced a woman and her 2-year-old child. “In 2017,” he said, “doctors at St. Luke’s hospital in Kansas City delivered one of the earliest premature babies ever to survive. Born at just 21 weeks and six days, and weighing less than a pound, Ellie Schneider was born a fighter. Through the skill of her doctors — and the prayers of her parents — little Ellie kept on winning the battle for life. Today, Ellie is a strong, healthy 2-year-old girl sitting with her amazing mother Robin in the gallery.” He then pivoted and called on Congress to pass legislatio­n finally banning “the late-term abortion of babies.”

One wishes he had said something about eliminatin­g outdated and unworkable government programs. Instead, he proposed even more programs, adding to our $23 trillion (and growing) national debt. He apparently still thinks growth will solve the problem, but not if he and Congress keep spending.

This was more than a State of the Union address. It was a campaign kickoff. According to Gallup, Trump received “a 10% approval rating among blacks in 2017, 11% in 2018 and 10% in December 2019.”

Emerson Polling and Rasmussen Reports put that number at 34%, which, depending on which poll you believe, might suggest the president’s appeal is growing in the African American community.

Maybe the administra­tion’s criminal justice reform legislatio­n and the call for expansion of school choice legislatio­n are responsibl­e for the rise?

Following his acquittal by the Senate on two articles of impeachmen­t, the president clearly has the wind at his back. With issues going his way and with the Democratic Party in disarray (the broken vote-counting app in the Iowa caucuses was an appropriat­e symbol of their dysfunctio­n) the president is poised for four more years. Readers may email Cal Thomas at tcaeditors@tribpub.com. Look for Cal Thomas’ new book “America’s Expiration Date: The Fall of Empires and Superpower­s and the Future of the United States” (Harpercoll­ins/zondervan).

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