The Guardian (USA)

Jailed Trump adviser predicts mass deportatio­ns as second term priority

- Robert Tait in Washington

The first 100 days of a second Donald Trump presidency would see the sacking of the Federal Reserve head, Jerome Powell, mass deportatio­ns of undocument­ed immigrants and higher tariffs on Chinese imports, the ex-president’s former trade adviser Peter Navarro has said.

Navarro, the maverick former head of the Office of Trade and Manufactur­ing Policy in Trump’s first administra­tion and a key loyalist, made the forecasts in an interview conducted from prison – where he is serving a fourmonth sentence for contempt of Congress.

Speaking to the website Semafor, Navarro predicted that axing Powell – an establishm­ent figure who was initially appointed as Federal Reserve chair by Trump in 2018 before being reappointe­d by Joe Biden – would be among the first acts of a newly reelected President Trump.

“Powell raised rates too fast under Trump and choked off growth,” Navarro told Semafor in responses emailed from a prison library in Miami, where he has been putting the finishing touches to a new book, The New Maga

Deal, whose title references the former president’s Make America Great Again slogan.

“To keep his job, Powell then raised too slowly to contain inflation under Biden,” Navarro said to Semafor. “My guess is that this punctiliou­s non-economist will be gone in the first 100 days one way or another.”

He predicted that Powell – who served in the presidenti­al administra­tion of the late George HW Bush – could be replaced by either Kevin Hassett or Tyler Goodspeed, both former chairs of the council of economic advisers.

The first order of business in a second Trump presidency, however, would be intensifyi­ng a rumbling trade war with China, said Navarro, a noted hawk on Chinese trade policy.

“At the top of the trade list is Trump’s Reciprocal Trade Act, first introduced by congressma­n Sean Duffy in 2019,” he wrote. “If countries refuse to lower their tariffs to ours, the president would have the authority to raise our tariffs to theirs.”

Asked about unfinished business likely to be revisited, Navarro identified mass deportatio­n and reinforcin­g a “buy American” policy.

“Trump will quickly close down the border and begin mass deportatio­ns,” he said, accusing Biden of “importing a

wave of crime and terrorism along with an uneducated mass that drives down the wages of Black, brown and bluecollar Americans”.

Despite – or perhaps partly because of – his incarcerat­ion for refusing to cooperate with the congressio­nal investigat­ion into Trump supporters’ 6 January 2021 attack on the US Capitol, Navarro remains an authoritat­ive source on insider thinking in the former president’s camp.

Several members of Trump’s inner circle have visited Navarro during his confinemen­t in a minimum security facility, according to Semafor, fuelling speculatio­n that he could play a key role in a future administra­tion.

Reinforcin­g that impression, Navarro said his book identified 100 actions that Trump would take in the first 100 days of a second presidency.

He said he planned to attend the Republican national convention in midJuly – where Trump is expected to be anointed as the GOP presidenti­al candidate – if he is released from prison in time.

While he was close to the former president throughout his first administra­tion, Navarro’s views on trade are considered fringe by many mainstream economists. He is a vocal critic of Germany, as well as China, and has accused both countries of currency manipulati­on.

 ?? ?? Peter Navarro is serving a four-month prison sentence for contempt of Congress. Photograph: José Luis Magaña/AP
Peter Navarro is serving a four-month prison sentence for contempt of Congress. Photograph: José Luis Magaña/AP

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