Welcome to the Age of Trump, where no one has any idea what the policies of the President of the United States are, including the President of the United States.
There has never before been a U.S. president whose stated goals were as simultaneously vague, preposterous, and contradictory.
Nor has there ever been a president who has intermittently taken strong stances that were so directly at odds with his own party’s most fervent dogma and his own appointees.
Nor has there been a president who was as completely uninterested in the basics of politics. It’s as though America is playing in the World Series with a manager who truly doesn’t care about baseball.
What this adds up to is that there’s not a single person who knows exactly what the Trump administration is going to try to do. No one could be surprised if Trump suddenly announced that he wants NASA to send a team to colonize Neptune; that he’s going to lead the team; and that he’s signed a deal with China to personally make $3 billion for the reality show syndication rights.
But while nothing is certain, some alarming things are more likely than others. The path the new administration hopes to take may be discernible in a 2016 report by the conservative Heritage Foundation. According to The Hill on Thursday, Trump transition staffers – including a vice president at Heritage’s grassroots arm Action for America – are using the Heritage document as the basis for Trump’s first proposed budget.
The Trump transition staff did not respond to questions about whether they are in fact doing this, and understandably so — the Heritage plan treats social spending like Lizzie Borden treated her parents, axing $10.5 trillion, or 20 percent, from the $51.4 trillion that the Congressional Budget Office projects the federal government would otherwise spend over the next ten years.
“Unprecedented” is simultaneously accurate and insufficient to describe the Heritage cuts. As Joel Friedman, vice president for federal fiscal policy at the liberal Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, puts it: “No administration up to this point has ever bought into proposals this far-reaching. Even the George W. Bush administration was never proposing cuts of anywhere near this magnitude.”
| CBO projections | Heritage proposal | Difference | |
| Social Security | 12,580 | 11,883 | -697 |
| Medicare | 8,016 | 6,353 | -1,663 |
| Medicaid & Other Mandatory | 12,057 | 7,621 | -4,436 |
| Defense Discretionary | 6,481 | 6,684 | 203 |
| Non-Defense Discretionary | 6,494 | 3,970 | -2,524 |
| Net Interest | 5,759 | 4,413 | -1,346 |
| Total spending | 51,388 | 40,924 | -10,464 |
| Total revenues | 42,010 | 40,710 | -1,300 |
Source: CBO: The Budget and Economic Outlook: 2016 to 2026; Heritage Foundation: A Blueprint for Balance: A Federal Budget for 2017
Compiled by: Ernie Tedeschi
As seen above, $6.8 trillion in cuts – or 65 pecent of the total — would be extracted from Social Security, Medicare, Medicaid, and other non-discretionary spending, including all of the Affordable Care Act.
In addition to sharply reducing Social Security and Medicare benefits for most people, the Heritage plan would raise the programs’ eligibility ages and then index them to longevity – thereby enshrining in law the concept that no matter how wealthy the U.S. becomes, regular people will never be permitted to work fewer years at the end of their lives.
Heritage does not provide details about how exactly Medicaid and other mandatory spending would be whacked, but the cuts would be even heavier. While most Americans don’t know this until they need it, 65 percent of the elderly in nursing homes depend on Medicaid to pay their bills, and the program covers 45 percent of the country’s spending on nursing home care overall. Non-Medicaid mandatory spending includes income security for veterans, food stamps, and unemployment benefits.
Non-defense discretionary spending would also be eviscerated. Heritage would slice expenditures on clean energy, environmental programs, and veterans’ health, as well as funding for the Departments of Commerce, Transportation, Justice, and State. The National Endowment for the Arts and National Endowment for the Humanities would be totally eliminated.
While all this is happening, one part of the government would see its budget protected and even increased: the Pentagon.
But wait, there’s more: The Heritage plan gets more draconian as time goes by, so these numbers actually understate the size of spending cuts in the long term. The graph below shows by percentage how much each area of government would be reduced in Heritage’s 2026 budget in comparison to the CBO’s current projection for 2026. For instance, spending on non-defense discretionary spending would be cut almost in half.
If Mike Pence were president, we’d know that he’d be committed to passing as much of this agenda as possible. But with Trump, there’s simply no way to know what will happen.
Trump has chosen many Republicans for key positions, especially Rep. Tom Price for Secretary of Health and Human Services and Rep. Mick Mulvaney for director of the Office of Management and Budget, who’ve spent their careers trying to dismantle Social Security and Medicare.
And we know that Republicans are generally on board with the Heritage vision. In fact, today’s Republican Party is more ideologically extreme than it has been in the memory of almost all living Americans. Most importantly, it now rejects the post-World War II bipartisan consensus that the New Deal was a good thing. The Republicans’ long term plan is to roll it back as far as possible, ideally returning the U.S. to a time without Social Security, Medicare, unemployment insurance, or much regulation of business. The fact that this kind of brutal capitalism in the past was accompanied by the rise of communism and fascism and two cataclysmic wars doesn’t seem to worry them.
Still, one of the main things that distinguished Trump during his campaign is that he vociferously and repeatedly committed to protecting Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid:
I was the first & only potential GOP candidate to state there will be no cuts to Social Security, Medicare & Medicaid. Huckabee copied me.
— Donald J. Trump (@realDonaldTrump) May 7, 2015
But then again, Trump could declare this commitment inoperative at any moment, just as he has with many other campaign promises. (In fact, he largely did this already before the election regarding Medicaid.) It’s also possible he has no idea that his staff is working on this plan, and will distractedly sign a bill gutting entitlements in between disparaging tweets about Rachel Maddow’s ratings.
Moreover, there is no constituency opposed to these draconian cuts among elected Republicans and their media penumbra. Since the election, talk radio, Fox and conservative print media have been noticeably silent about or supportive of a frontal assault on social spending by the congressional GOP. Even Breitbart, which back in June was extremely enthusiastic about Trump’s vows to preserve the safety net, is now calling for “productive negotiation between the White House and Congress” on “entitlement reform.” It’s easy to imagine much of the Heritage plan could pass before Trump voters even know it’s on the table.
Then there’s the Affordable Care Act, which Republicans plan to grudgingly replace with something worse at an indefinite time in the future. But Trump carpet-bombed the GOP position in an interview with the Washington Post last week, claiming that he has a replacement plan almost ready that includes “insurance for everybody” and “lower numbers, much lower deductibles.”
Trump also told the Post that pharmaceutical companies are no longer “politically protected” and that he’ll be able to force them to lower drug prices.
In term of Trump’s purported goals, there are just two ways to make them happen: Single payer health insurance, or an amped up, more expensive version of Obamacare with higher subsidies and the option to buy some kind of government-provided coverage. Then to beat the prescription drug industry, he’d have to confront congressional Republicans who, according to an analysis by the Center for Responsive Politics, have received more than $31 million in campaign donations from the pharmaceutical and health products industries in the four years since the 2012 election.
So the most likely explanation for Trump’s effusion is that his plan doesn’t exist anywhere except inside his head. As National Review contributor Yuval Levin recently explained, “the conservative health-care universe, including some people on Trump’s own team, quickly concluded that the separate administration plan he described was entirely a figment of Trump’s imagination.”
Faiz Shakir, national political director for the American Civil Liberties Union and until recently a top aide to now-retired Senate Democratic minority leader Harry Reid, believes that congressional Democrats view it the same way, and are not strategizing about how they could help Trump pass his splendid improvement on Obamacare.
Moreover, even if Trump were sincere, it’s extremely unlikely he has the power or personal characteristics needed to make much happen over Republican opposition. The sole support in conservative media for such a plan comes from Breitbart, which says that Trump’s antagonism toward big pharma “is yet another example of where Trump’s populist nationalism — he’s a president for the working class, and wants to stand up for American workers against world financial, cultural, and political elites — is rubbing up against [Speaker of the House] Ryan’s globalist elitism.”
Meanwhile, Trump’s voter base is enthusiastic but unorganized, and Trump himself has clearly demonstrated that he’s far too lazy and easily distracted to push a huge political project through to completion.
Shakir, who spent years witnessing the legislative process up close on Capitol Hill, says that experience taught him “how much time and patience is required to pass big bills, and how fundamentally boring and tedious it can be. I cannot imagine Trump giving a damn” to the degree necessary.
On taxes, Trump and Congress will likely find a lot of common ground, though not on every issue.
Even the conservative, corporate-funded Tax Foundation believes that over the next ten years Trump’s campaign plan would reduce tax revenues by trillions. The richest 1 percent would see by far the biggest tax cuts.
The best measurement of this is the ratio of the government’s accumulated debt to the gross domestic product. Ronald Reagan’s tax cuts and crazy Pentagon spending spree increased this ratio by about 14 points. George W. Bush’s tax cuts and wars increased it almost 6 percentage points. By 2026 the tax cuts Trump wants would by themselves likely drive it up by almost the same amount as Reagan did.
However, thanks to the Great Recession, the U.S. would be starting from a far weaker financial position than under Reagan or Bush. We are extraordinarily rich and powerful, and since we borrow in our own currency we can print money to pay any debts. But even America has limits. It’s not impossible to imagine Trump combining his gargantuan tax cuts with a new money-pit war and a Bush-style Wall Street catastrophe. This could create a situation in which we could not escape either galloping inflation or interest rates so high they crush the economy, or both.
Trump and the GOP do differ on a Republican approach to changing the corporate tax code called “border adjustment.” Surprisingly enough, this might raise taxes at the top a bit and make the overall tax code slightly more progressive. In addition, says Dean Baker, an economist and co-director of the Center for Economic and Policy Research, “the current corporate tax system is a cesspool. It has made for a massive tax avoidance industry which is the source of some of the worst inequality in the economy” – and done right, a move to a border adjustment system “eliminates the vast majority of the opportunities for gaming [and would be] a huge step forward.”
Where does Trump come down on this idea? He opposes it. It would be, he says, “too complicated” – apparently unlike all the simple ways to tax multinational corporations.
Then there are executive orders, which Trump can issue without the involvement of Congress and where he does have something approaching a coherent plan to fulfill parts of his campaign rhetoric.
On his first day in office, Trump signed an executive order instructing government agencies to “take all actions consistent with law to minimize the unwarranted economic and regulatory burdens” of the Affordable Care Act. Trump and his aides have said that he will soon sign others that will direct money for the building of some kind of wall along some part of the U.S.-Mexico border, and rescind the Obama executive order that allowed hundreds of thousands of people brought into the U.S. as children to stay on a two-year authorization to go to college or work.
Trump has also claimed he will cancel all federal funding to sanctuary cities. He will suspend the current Syrian refugee program as well as, as he said in October, “immigration from terror-prone regions where vetting cannot safely occur.” And he will “announce our withdrawal from the Trans-Pacific Partnership,” although of course it’s never actually been voted on.
Finally there’s Trump’s foreign policy, the murkiest and least predictable part of his presidency of all — since Trump doesn’t seem to have discussed it with some of his key appointees or even taken their views into account when choosing them.
Rex Tillerson, Trump’s potential secretary of state, disagreed repeatedly during his confirmation hearings with Trump’s stated policies. Trump has said the world might be “better off” if Japan or South Korea obtained their own nuclear weapons, something Tillerson flatly opposed. He put distance between himself and Trump on Muslim immigrants. Perhaps most surprisingly, Tillerson claimed that if he’d been secretary of state when Russia annexed Crimea, he would have advocated that the U.S. provide Ukraine, which is not part of NATO, with arms, intelligence and air surveillance.
While Trump has claimed that “torture works,” both Mike Pompeo, his pick for head of the CIA, and Defense Secretary James Mattis have opposed Trump’s advocacy for waterboarding and “a hell of lot worse than waterboarding.” During Mattis’s hearings he also supported NATO; was strongly negative about Russia; and said “we have to live up to” the nuclear accord with Iran, which Trump has said he wants to “dismantle.”
So here we are, wandering in the post-truth, post-fact, post-everything Trump fog. We can just make out a few hazy, ominous shapes coming towards us, and no one knows what else is out there beyond our sight. But most frightening of all is that the President of the United States is somewhere around here too, and he’s just as lost as we are.
Terrifying scenarios. My only critique of your otherwise excellent and thought-provoking piece would be for you to insert the word “allegedly” into your Lizzie Borden metaphor. Miss Borden only allegedly axed her parents. She was acquitted at her public trial for a lack of conclusive evidence.
Unfair: “as though America is playing in the World Series with a manager who truly doesn’t care about baseball”
In saying this, you nearly vindicate all of his Republican critics- and those, a bunch of religious nuts.
the one thing Intercept seems to get horribly wrong is that Trump is, at least, a sort-of secular candidate. And he smacked the hypocrites in his own party right i the face- he had the ballz to do what even Hillary was afraid to speak out loud: that the current version of Republican hypocrites and their version of a God is basically a flawed political calculus .
That could be explored, rather than the whole whinging about HRC and the flattery of the exact white female neo-establishment that ruined her chances because of endemic corruption, caused by toxic privilege.
I love the super-progs who are still willing to own the consequences of their self-love and declare that we may not have drinkable water, or women’s health care, or a government interested at all in defending civil rights, but by god, did we show Hillary Clinton that she can’t take us for granted! That means something, right? Even though we have to engage full word-salad mode and make up terms like “neo-establishment”, we are Very Serious People whose ideological purity must be respected, or by god, we will yank the goddamn wheel and put us into that ditch! Surely if and when we ever manage to get back on the road again, the neo-establishment will know that we are a force to be reckoned with, just like what happened after George W Bush got elected, right?
None of it’s going to get Ohioans’ jobs back.
I agree – the unknown factor is a huge problem regarding Trump.
The scariest part though, is that it takes cuts as large as the Heritage plan’s to bring income inline with spending. The budget should not be that out of whack.
The ultimate head game in logic. All sane and normal people know that Trump is racist. Millions of people support him. All of these people are racist.
How can you support a racist and not be racist yourself? You don’t have to take Logic 101 in univ. to see that. Now we’ve got 4 years of this mass delusion.
Who put faith into a person who is a failed businessman believe in file bankrupt instand, of pay the work man back so him can feed him family and pay him bills. A grown man who twitter at 2:00 in the morning like a teenage girl. Question him went to private school him hold life, but does has a vocabulary skills of a three year, and what up with that finger thing ok is him two year old.
Trump gave a very simple speech and made his future policies crystal clear, that is if you were listening and not grinding your teeth. Nobel Peace winner Barack Obama dropped on average four bombs per hour somewhere in the world in 2016 in the name of Global leadership, Trump wants to stop all that and start repairing American roads, infrastructure, build American enterprise, rebuild American military, stop terrorism, revamp immigration, and focus on neglected American people. Being a brown immigrant, I agree with Trump 100%.
There’s no point arguing about what we predict Trump will do. The only thing to ask is, can we count on your opposition to a war with Iran this year or next?
Hear hear a sober thought and not Hysterical virtue signalling by Marxist cultural propagandists…there still hope…
I’m curious, since you think Trump wants to “stop all that”, what your reaction is to this:
https://www.defense.gov/News/Article/Article/1056079/us-coalition-continue-strikes-against-isil-in-syria-iraq
and this:
http://www.bigstory.ap.org/article/bcee413a4b2544cc9b79eec1fc927f13/suspected-us-drone-strike-kills-3-alleged-al-qaida-yemen
Uh, don’t look now, but Trump dropped some bombs in Yemen over the weekend. I’m sure all the other brown immigrants who won’t get into the US would agree with you, this has been a great trade-off!
Some of you said no. To you I say yes.
Asian press reporting US has withdrawn from TPP. WhiteHouse.gov states that US will withdraw from TPP whitehouse.
https://www.whitehouse.gov/trade-deals-working-all-americans
It will be interesting to see what Trump can do to redefine the trade deficit. His insistence on “winning” at trade implies the deficit has to go down for him to be successful, and because he doesn’t really have anybody competent on the task, I’m guessing it won’t. So he needs to devise some way to keep the old trade deficits from being compared to the new…
As the US becomes poorer, the trade deficit will naturally correct itself (since Americans will no longer be able to afford foreign made goods). So Mr. Trump’s task is to make the US as poor as possible as quickly as possible. This will solve the trade deficit, the influx of illegal immigrants and the disparity of wealth – all the problems that Mr. Trump was elected to solve.
The root problem is that the US dollar is the international reserve currency, creating a worldwide demand for US dollars. This increases the value of the dollar and makes US citizens rich, at least relative to other nations. Once the dollar is no longer the reserve currency, its value will depend on the competitiveness of US manufacturing and its value will plummet. US banks will shrink to a fraction of their current size.
With the dollar collapsing, illegal immigrants will return to their home countries in search of jobs, as their families complain their dollar remittances are worthless. The problem of global warming will also be solved, as Americans can no longer afford the cars and air conditioners that contribute to climate change. As people begin to starve, they will no longer be complacent about the outsize wealth of billionaires and will demand redistribution of income so they can feed their hungry children. However, this won’t solve the problem, since those billions, like all other assets held in US dollars will now be almost worthless. So Americans will sneak across the Mexican border searching for jobs picking crops in order to keep themselves fed.
I’d only add one caveat to this rosy picture: sometimes when you get want you want, it is less sweet than you anticipated.
The dollar almost seised to be the world reserve currency in the early naughts. There was talk at OPEC about switching to euros. There was talk about a Pan-African currency.
Wars and currency wars followed. Disharmony grew amongst Europeans and the eastward expansion weekend the EU. Goldman Sachs advised Greece and installed it with lies into the Euro Zone, a virus that currency could not survive.
The debts of the US would be crashing it in short order would the dollar stop being the reserve currency. The US might will do anything to stop that from happening.
Unusually dark for you Benito but accurate as always.
These titles from Jon’s articles are great. Therefore, I decided to collect them and briefly comment on them.
‘Obama must
Declassify
Evidence of
Russian Hacking’
Which is similar to
‘Obama must
Declassify
Evidence of
Extraterrestrial life’
Etc.
Or Jon’s article:
‘The real reason
Any Russian
Meddling is an
Emergency’
Since we live in a society where one is innocent until one is proven guilty (Magna Carta), there is no ‘Russian
Meddling’. Therefore, there is no ‘Emergency’. Therefore, there is no ‘real reason’. And therefore, based on the title only, Jon’s article can only reveal… nothing.
Or this one
‘US decline to Banana Republic
accelerates as Trump places
son in law Jared Kushner
in white house’
Of course this is not accelaration but same old, same old. JFK appointed his own brother as Attorney General, and President Bill Clinton put his wife in charge of his biggest campaign progress, universal health care. Please also note that Jon does not define ‘Banana Republic’ here which is: meddling by the US government in socialist countries, like Guatemala, to install a dictator who allows American companies like the United Fruit Company to run huge profits at the cost of the population who live in the Banana Republic.
Now there is this one
‘Anything at all
Can happen
In the age of Trump’
This is an honest confession from Jon that he is clueless about the Trump Phenomenon. Apparantly, even the possibility that the sky will fall down ‘in the age of Trump’ is something that Jon cannot rule out a-priori.
I am sure though that these silly titles from Jon will continue to appear in the age of Trump.
This article is way to much of a broad brushed accusatorial.
Nothing specific? As you’ve noted earlier none have initially, but no point is seen here that you would say one makes more non-specifics than another.
Anyhow, if you had done the research, you would have found specifics by today.
There’s always the ability to show up at the press conferences if you can get in, or get with Pres Trumps press staff, or other ranking Secretaries to get answers. Some matters are indeed, however, not clear yet but we are aware of the proposals and now time to get the think tank together to come up with a plan for those proposal.
Let’s be patient, since now is the weekend, and only 3 days.
If you so desire, there’s always the President’s website
https://donaldjtrump.com
btw, it might not work properly in Opera browser.
“it’s extremely unlikely he [Trump] has the power or personal characteristics needed to make much happen over Republican opposition. ”
This made me chuckle, where has this writer been the past 15 months?
Jeb’s campaign manager made a similar claim about Trump early in the primaries. Ah, memories.
Here is an idea. Why don’t you go consult some MMT economists ask what they think about this alleged “program.”
If you can’t get Warren Mosle,r try Stephanie Kelton. She was Bernie Sanders economic advisor.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ba8XdDqZ-Jg
The above video link has bit with Paul Ryan and Alan Greenspan at about 49 minutes. It deals Social Security and private accounts.
As he said at the last debate about if he would accept the election results; he will keep you in suspense.
Way better than the last submission Jon.
TRUMP ON ENTITLEMENTS: Rage Against the Machine: Paul Ryans Domestic Entitlement Reforms Driven Domestic Economic Policies
Come to Life.
TRUMP ON HEALTH CARE: Obamacare Single Provider Health Care Exchanges Dying: 55 VOTES TO REPEAL. And an Unlikely Stand With Rand. http://www.latimes.com/business/hiltzik/la-fi-hiltzik-trump-paul-20170117-story.html
TRUMP ON FOREIGN POLICY: America First.
There actually IS a Third Way. We all have been reluctant to consider it, but as we see the other options on this table, it will start to make much sense indeed.
We know that the rest of the world gets medicine much cheaper than the U.S.! We know that snakebite shots that Americans pay tens of thousands of dollars for are capped at $7 a vial in India! We know that most of the essential medicines sell for pennies!
We have been in this false dichotomy between paying more than we can possibly afford whenever we get sick, or having the government tax the rich so we can afford to have more than we can possibly afford paid on our behalf when we get sick.
But there is a third way — we recognize, as a matter of life and death, as a personal and societal necessity, that the smugglers and the cartels, the black-market and unlicensed doctors, are the legitimate face of medicine. And with our tens and twenties we can build an engine of crime so powerful that no army can stop it, not even the Americans. They tell us we can’t import medicine from Canada (let alone India) — well, they can shoot their way through! The theory of just war authorizes it — if the people are denied medicine by any other way, the theory of just war demands it. “These rights we hold to be self-evident: LIFE!” Imagine a city with the hospitals in ruins and they do the operations in the crack-houses.
When we see someone like Chapo Guzman, whom no jail can hold for long, even in America, what should we think? We should think no jail can hold him because he’s smart. That’s what Trump would say, that’s what most Americans believe.
Why Trump May Already Be Playing The Evil Game Of The US Deep State, Without Even Knowing It
This isn’t coming out of Trump per se. It is coming out of the Heritage Foundation. Which I kind of figured it would when Trump selected Stephen Moore as his chief economist. From the MMT standpoint (and Keynesian as well ), removing this much spending/income for the real economy will trigger the “mother of all recessions” if it isn’t balanced in some way–and probably even if it is.
This maybe the only thing that can save the Democrat party. Public option/Single payer would be good for business.
The thing to remember is that while Trump (or his team) may propose a budget, it is the Congress and Senate that actually have to write it, and the Teabaggers know that the worst thing that can happen to them is actually seeing their proposals become actual policy, so what comes out of that process (if anything) will look different from the Trump budget.
On the issue of the conflicts over foreign policy between Trump and his appointees, the important thing to remember is that they are just that HIS appointees, and more vulnerable to the whims of his opinion than any of his Apprentice contestants. They can SAY whatever they like, but they’ll do whatever he wants, when he wants it, how he wants it, even if it is the opposite of what he wanted 5 minutes ago, knowing that failing to do so loses them the title.
PS, anyone betting on an impeachment of Trump will be disappointed. He ‘won’ because he won the votes of those the Republican establishment AND the Democrat establishment know they need to get to win, and given the qualities of those voters, no matter how egregious the offence, and how overwhelming the evidence, they’ll take the impeachment of their Trump as a personal attack by whichever party pushes the impeachment through.
So its 4 years (at least) of President Trump tweets.
This is as true as it is funny: “… HIS appointees… are more vulnerable to the whims of his opinion than any of his Apprentice contestants.”
Anyone with a few neurons to rub together understands the Americans with the fewest vertebrae are those with the most official sounding titles.
I do wonder what Trump, et.al. will do when there are 10’s of millions of people out on the street starving and/or freezing to death. Send out the street cleaners en masse?
It sure wasn’t President Trump’s policies that led to 10’s of millions of homeless people in the United States. The Obama administration widened inequality hugely, and failure to invest in affordable housing programs, and social care have all been factors. There is unfortunately no quick fix but policies that focus on creating more employment, with jobs returning to America will help.
“Send out the street cleaners en masse?”
Check out the movie posters for Soylent Green.
2022 is right around the corner.
I agree, anything at all can happen with Trump. He can transfer trillions to Wall Street through bailouts and money-printing, without any prosecutions. He can claim the legal right to kill anyone without judicial oversight. He and his directors can lie to the world about NSA spying. He can arm Nazi groups in the Ukraine. He can arm Jihadists in Syria and Libya for regime change. He can bomb any country into the ground, like Libya and Syria, without congressional oversight. He can open up vast amounts of area to fracking, bomb trains, and offshore drilling. He can raise the legal limits of radiation in drinking water. He can instruct his EPA to fight environmental groups in court. He can hire the outsourcing CEO of GE as jobs czar, etc.
He can do all these things, and liberals will not have the moral authority to say anything!
Great post, very informative, and much better than your last one abou the evil Russkies. Focusing on the actual train wrecks that Trump might support seems much more to the point. And of course you are also right to point out that Trump is a mass of contradictions.
how to guage Trump v the alternatives .. maybe compare wars waged, mass deaths, destruction, suffering, war hysteria?
The problem is Trump has picked people who basically are more of the same. People in Yemen are still going to be bombed. He supports the extreme right in Israel. Many of Trump’s advisors are itching for a fight with Iran. And Trump seems to want to start a completely unnecessary argument with a China over Taiwan.
Jon you have no idea…
Apparently, neither do you. If so, please share.
Trump is your friend intercept. TRUST ME. The folks at CNN, not so.
His first step is build a governing coalition and then purge Republicans he doesn’t like. The rollout of that strategy stated in the transition and then got delayed by the intelligence disclosures.
The Bitterness of hatred , the Backlash of the entitled will remain long after the sweetness of campaign Lies and Deception fades. I have been a nurse for 48 years . I treated everyone with dignity and respect, and love. This Greater America Trumps proposes seems to have no moral compass but wealth and power. SAD
You obviously did not listen to trump and speak lies. Not true but keep pretending to be better than everyone else okay – you’re doing a fabulous job.
We would not be here if it were not for the grandiose CrookdClintOs plans and lies– here is their Change!
One of the biggest things that Trump needs to do to help protect American jobs is to pass legislation that will ensure that new industry disruptive technologies are used responsibly in a way that is not wiping out millions of jobs. Technology must be used in a way that benefits the whole of society and not just a few. With AI, drone delivery, driverless cars, smart machines, and other disruptive technologies of automation all coming together threatening mass technology unemployment. This should be a very high priority, and this is in addition to the damage being caused to local communities by online shopping, and E Retailers need to be encouraged to put jobs back into communities that have lost thousands or traditional retail jobs. Too many jobs have also been lost abroad through Globalisation, and this trend needs to be reversed, and it will help to tear up all of the trade pacts. Corporations under Obama betrayed America through cheating the taxation system, and by shipping jobs and profits overseas. All of this piracy and tax avoidance has to stop.
Under Mr. Trump, everyone will be given a job, putting Humpty Dumpty back together again.
You can not stop the future the future you fear is tomorrow’s reality. You can prepare for. The job destroying technologies can also be used to build better lives. Green “zero-house” and live green with much lower environmental impact and economic cost. The internet virtual reality gives circus and a greenhouse for garden can provide much bread. Shorter work week and more spare time for many. Those who wish can work in their spare time to further their life’s goals.
Some population control and converting from a consumer to a conservation for profit World economy will be required. Hint the Henry Ford type, that can use the new cheaper technologies to produce a high quality factory made two bedroom zero-house, and push through reliable high standard National building codes so they can be built Nation-wide and/or World-wide for about 100K per house will make their fortune. Room addition can be added for the extra child or parent, special custom use and sold off as the need is lost.
A better Nation and World requires sound planning and hard work. We will get the future we plan and work for. The current “system” of governance and economics makes for poor stewardship of the future and if not changed the four horsemen always got a backup plan.
This isn’t accurate.
Everyone knows exactly what the Trump administration is going to try to do.
Here are a bunch of hints. TRUMP … steaks, vodka, casino, tower, jet, fashions, beauty pageants, cameos, University, kids, rallies, wives, etc.
The Trump administration will try to aggrandize and enrich Donald Trump. That’s exactly why he surrounds himself with both dullwitted political amateurs (e.g,, Carson, DeVos, Lewandowski) and sly political manipulators (Christie, Bannon, Manafort). Trump’s ego is the center.
This isn’t a political movement — this is a vanity presidency.
All the dire consequences, all the preposterous claims, all the apparent contradictions resolve as soon as people accept the fact of Trump’s mental problems.
He’s a narcissist, a bully, a showman, a profiteer, a paranoid, and a blustering clown all because he can’t help himself. He uses the people around him not because they have merit but because they appeal to his deep and insatiable insecurity.
Without his inheritance, he would be Ron Burgundy. Instead he controls and is controlled by his wealth. He lives within a fragile psychological tower in which its fragility is hidden by garish golden gilt and deferential dilettantes sustaining his delusions.
Unpredictable?
Nonsense.
He is more predictable than a contented cow in pasture.
This column is nothing more than a collection of hysterical speculations, and is therefore worthless. Trump is now in power and over the next six months we will find out what his idea of governance really is as bills are passed and policies are implemented. Patience will be rewarded with an opportunity for a clear, rational assessment of his presidency that is fact based.
It’s nice to see The Intercept taking such an optimistic stance. Even under Mr. Trump, the laws of gravity probably still apply, but people can worry about such mundane details later.
Will Mr. Trump deport more people than any president in history? Will he jail more whistle-blowers than any president in history? Perhaps. But Mr. Obama’s record of presiding over war longer than Franklin D. Roosevelt, Lyndon B. Johnson, Richard M. Nixon, his hero Abraham Lincoln or any other president in American history, will probably remain safe – unless Mr. Trump’s health is so good that he survives into a third term.
and Donald Trump is Humpty Dumpty.
By installing this clown as president, the entire country will suffer his inevitable fall.
In the Age of Trump, putting Humpty Dumpty back together again is totally possible.
Humpty Dumpty will be yooooooge again!
Will he scrap women’s health care? Will he gut clean air regulations? Will he discontinue immunity from deportation for child immigrants? Will he clean out the civil rights branch of the Justice Department? Will he cut taxes for everyone earning over $200k? You can easily compile a list of super-prog disappointments, because that is the nature of human progress–imperfect and intermittent, but the facts remain; the Democratic party represented a vast difference from what Trump promised, and dudes like you said “Nah, not good enough. I’m going to snark and neg and wallow in self pity. Once Donald Trump is elected, moderate Democrats will surely recognize how important it is to cater to the political instincts of their moral betters! Surely!” Just like what happened after George W Bush was elected, right?
“What this adds up to is that there’s not a single person who knows exactly what the Trump administration is going to try to do.”
“If Mike Pence were president, we’d know that he’d be committed to passing as much of this agenda as possible. But with Trump, there’s simply no way to know what will happen.”
Right & Right again
Hope President Trump says well, save and in Office. The unknown Trump may be a much better than if Pence an establishment member in good standing takes over. If Trump pushes these cuts he will not get most, SS third rail, and be out in 2020. We might even get better chooses from both parties?
Ladies taking to the street today shows there is interest in representative governance, good for now . Everyone should stay tuned and involved, America is up for “grabs”. ALL We the people should have our say and be represented.
Or maybe we might get voters who can see the better choices in OTHER parties, like the Greens, for instance?
Good job. Please keep up your effort to malign Donald Trump. Doesn’t matter you could not stop him from getting elected. So what? Just carry on spreading false rumors and fake news.
I am quite sure a lot of these news are generated by folks like George Soros and Warren Buffet who lost lots of money because Trump got elected, and they are hell-bent on discrediting him. I think it will be a good idea if some of the better folks in the Intercept got around to interviewing those disappointed fellows and asked them what their plans are to disrupt Trump’s presidency and unpresident him.
coolstorybro.jpg
Yes. Sick people like George Soros, Warren Buffet,Rupert Murdoch are behind the orchestrated mass media campaign to spread fake news. They have no respect for democracy. They are the same sad losers who continue to whine on and on about Brexit. They should be interviewed along with the Clintons but not by the Intercept.
GSoros, owner of Walden schools with very heavy federal student debt load– CrookdCliinton was Honorary helper to tune of -$18MILLION!
PropOrNot?
What exactly is fake in this article ? There are sources for each claim, everytime the author comments on a policy advocated by the President or his cabinet, he’s directly using what they said and there are records of that, which are provided in the article.
Please, do tell me what’s fake in there instead of rambling on and on about evil soros
Why Trump may already be playing the evil game of the US deep state, without even knowing it
http://bit.ly/2j8yTRN
Bitly and tinyurl links are among the most common spearphising malware links, and should never be clicked on. Not that one, certainly.
http://www.computerworlduk.com/security/url-shortening-are-these-services-now-too-big-security-risk-use-3635431/
If the Intercept can run a policy of only allowing one link per post, surely they can scrub out any such links as well. Seems like a pretty basic issue.
I asked about using bit.ly here and never got a response.
Thank you.
In spite of hearing from others that if I post more than one link, my comment is likely to be held up, it is not stated policy. Did I miss it?
What’s up with Twitter, then? They say they have their own url shortening, but I have never seen it shorten my link. Of course, I only got active 11/9/16, so maybe I scanned and misunderstood Twitter’s rules. Or maybe I missed the spot that said “paste here.”
Thank you.
“We are extraordinarily rich and powerful” – are we (less than 5% of the world’s population? An American delusion, shared by left and right – and one about to be blown out of the water by global reality.
My father used to say to me: “Son, the people will never stand up to the bastards until they’re eating rat soup again”. A second American revolution of one sort or another is on its way – and a long overdue constitutional convention, if we’re lucky .
Up for it?
Time for change, and time for the political elites who caused so much suffering and inequality suffer to.The criminal Obama administration is dead, and now the Washington sewer can be disinfected.Cut off its tentacles and its control of the dishonest mass media. Investigate the Clinton Foundation, and the war profiteers. America now has a President who will serve its people, not just the agenda of a few ultra rich billionaires and their corporate agendas. America can no longer afford the elite, and their Fascism and Imperialism
Anon, surely you jest. Trump has a few ultra rich billionaires as appointees. And how do you propose that Trump’s team control the media? You don’t believe in the 1st amendment? Are you an American?
You want change, you’re gonna get it, and unless you are a millionaire or billionaire, you’ll be eating shit sandwiches along with the rest of us.
You quote the 1st amendment LOL What part of that was respected by the Obama administration, or by those that corporatized the US Government, and turned it into a criminal enterprise. So what that Trump has a few billionaires as appointees, at least they are not the same scum that profited so richly from the fake self perpetuated War on Terror, and all of the extremist Imperialism that was so evident in Obomba’s administration.Obama only delivered widening inequality in America, and he squandered billions of dollars on wars which could have been used for investment in much needed infrastructure in the US.
The mass media are hugely damaged already and nobody believes their lies anymore, as everyone knows they are dishonest and cannot be trusted. The people of the World want new leaders and Governments that serve them, and not just a few ultra rich psychopathic, sociopaths who thought they could get away with corrupting the political system.Nobody wants Governments that have morphed with corporations to make an industrialised, militarised complex. Fascism came cloaked and hidden as the controlling element of the Democrats, and they can try to paint President Trump as an extremist racist bigot, but the real extremists have just been defeated, and good riddance, may they never return.
You can’t be serious – you think Trump’s advisor Erik Prince is “not the same scum that profited so richly from the fake self perpetuated War on Terror”? You think he is not an extremist imperialist?
I take it back – you probably are serious … seriously fucking stupid.
I think that you are mixing presidents and eras. WJC began privatizing the military. GW increased it by a huge percentage.
Taking your sweeping claims about President Obama aside, I question your sources, since you don’t trust the damaged mass media, which still has other excellent journalists. Mr Obama wanted a Jobs Act wrapped up in an infrastructure bill, but the Republican Congress wouldn’t give him either.
Again, I have no idea how or where you formed your opinions, because you either don’t read or you don’t understand what you read. The corruption, about which you complain, started long before the Obama Admin. He didn’t fix a broken system and perpetuated and expanded the military-industrial-intelligence-complex. I like him on a personal level, even though many of his policies and lack of – made me crazy.
The Trump Admin has shaped up to be the most ethically challenged, and will likely be the most corrupt admin in our lifetime. This is from just the people whose names/cv are public. Of the 29 top positions filled, it is extreme, indeed.
I am not a Dem, and for good reasons, but it is not only the Dems calling out the new narcissistic, authoritarian, unstable, unprepared, crass, incapable, erratic, and dangerous POTUS.
I cannot square your words with reality.
One can hope that the Constitutional Convention keeps the rights we have and codifies more. If not, we could have state churches, restrictions on the right to vote, and codified second-class citizens.
Good because a lot of things do need to happen like :
1. Investigating the Clinton Foundation and CNN Clinton News Network
2. Tearing up all of the trade pacts
3. Ensuring the billions of dollars that US corporations have taken overseas are returned
4. Ending the anti Russian sabre rattling
5. De politicising the CIA
6. Pardoning Edward Snowden and ensuring the release of Julian Assange
7. Ending the self perpetuated fake War on Terror and investigating the war profiteers
8. Dealing with a mass media which has become the propaganda machine of the criminal Washington elite
9. Most importantly ensuring American families benefit from job and opportunity creation, and reducing the inequality which widened hugely under Obama.
10. Rebuilding good relationships with other countries, and reversing the damage caused by Globalisation, and American imperialism.
You like a insane white man
“conservative Heritage Foundation”
More accurate is reactionary Heritage Foundation.
Indeed. When they oppose their own health plan…
“most frightening of all is that President of the United States is somewhere around here too, and he’s just as lost as we are”
Aint it the truth. But one thing he’s got that we haven’t are the bull dogs and big guns.
Thank God for that!…you’d probably give them to Iran. #MAGA greater than ever before.
Reagan did that.
He also did that while giving weapons to Iraq.
Be nice.
I am sure Joy would not want to end up on the sanctions evaders list.
Not everybody here who is dismayed, disgusted, and more, about POTUS is a flaming liberal, “leftist,” or even a Democrat. WTF does Iran have to do with this?