Donald Trump Campaign Promises - Circa Nov 2024

From Federal Burro of Information
Revision as of 05:54, 8 November 2024 by David (talk | contribs)
(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)
Jump to navigationJump to search


---

BBC

sources:

1) Deport undocumented migrants

While campaigning, Trump promised the biggest mass deportations of undocumented migrants in US history.

He also pledged to complete the building of a wall at the border with Mexico that was started during his first presidency.

The number of crossings at the US southern border hit record levels at the end of last year during the Biden-Harris administration, before falling in 2024.

Experts have told the BBC that deportations on the scale promised by Trump would face huge legal and logistical challenges - and could slow economic growth.

""

2) Moves on economy, tax and tariffs

Exit poll data has suggested the economy was a key issue for voters. Trump has promised to "end inflation" - which rose to high levels under President Joe Biden before falling again. But a president's power to directly influence prices is limited.

He has also promised sweeping tax cuts, extending his overhaul from 2017. He has proposed making tips tax-free, abolishing tax on social security payments and shaving corporation tax.

He has proposed new tariffs of at least 10% on most foreign goods, to cut the trade deficit. Imports from China could bear an additional 60% tariff, he has said. Some economists have warned that such moves could push up prices for ordinary people.

""

3) Cut climate regulations

During his first presidency, Trump rolled back hundreds of environmental protections and made America the first nation to withdraw from the Paris climate agreement.

This time, he has again vowed to cut regulations, particularly as a way to help the American car industry. He has constantly attacked electric vehicles, promising to overturn Biden's targets encouraging the switch to cleaner cars.

He has pledged to increase production of US fossil fuels - vowing to "drill, drill, drill" on day one in favour of renewable energy sources such as wind power.

He wants to open areas such as the Arctic wilderness to oil drilling, which he argues would lower energy costs - though analysts are sceptical.

What does a Trump win mean for the UK? Trade, aid, security: What does Trump's win mean for Africa? What Trump's win means for Ukraine, Middle East and China US election is a major setback for climate action, experts say Seven states expand abortion protections as Florida ballot fails ""

4) End Ukraine war

Trump has criticized the tens of billions of dollars spent by the US on supporting Ukraine in its war with Russia - and has pledged to end the conflict "within 24 hours" through a negotiated deal.

He has not said what he thinks either side should give up. Democrats say the move would embolden President Vladimir Putin.

Trump wants the US to disentangle itself from foreign conflicts generally. Regarding the war in Gaza - Trump has positioned himself as a staunch supporter of Israel, but has urged the American ally to end its operation.

He has also pledged to end the related violence in Lebanon, but gave no detail on how.

""

5) No abortion ban

Against the wishes of some of his supporters, Trump said during the presidential debate with Kamala Harris that he would not sign into law a national abortion ban.

In 2022, the nationwide constitutional right to abortion was overturned by the Supreme Court, which had a majority of conservative judges following Trump's first presidency.

Reproductive rights became a key campaigning topic for Harris, and several states approved measures to protect or expand abortion rights on polling day.

Trump himself has regularly said states should be free to decide their own laws on abortion, but struggled to find a consistent message of his own.

""

6) Pardon some Jan 6 rioters

Trump has said he will "free" some of those convicted of offences during the riot in Washington DC on 6 January 2021, when his supporters stormed the Capitol building in an effort to thwart the 2020 election victory of Joe Biden.

Several deaths were blamed on the violence, which Trump was accused of inciting.

He has worked to downplay the riot's significance and recast the hundreds of supporters who were convicted as political prisoners.

He continues to say many of them are "wrongfully imprisoned", though has acknowledged that "a couple of them, probably they got out of control".

When does Trump become US president again? What could happen to Trump's legal cases now? Who was who in Trump's huge victory entourage? The Trump family: A guide to an American dynasty Donald Trump: A remarkable life in pictures ""

7) Sack Special Counsel Jack Smith

Trump has vowed to sack "within two seconds" of taking office the veteran prosecutor leading two criminal investigations against him.

Special Counsel Jack Smith has indicted Trump over alleged efforts to overturn the 2020 election, and over his alleged mishandling of classified documents.

Trump denies any wrongdoing, and managed to prevent either case coming to trial before the election. He says Mr Smith has subjected him to a "political witch hunt".

Trump will return to the White House as the first ever president with a criminal conviction, having been found guilty in New York of falsifying business records.

Politico

The Trump agenda: Here’s what to expect from his second term Armed with a better understanding of government, Trump is expected to pursue a bigger agenda, faster than he did in his first term.

An illustration of Donald Trump standing in front of the White House. Several illustrated icons represent his policy priorities now that he will be president. Illustrations by Ana Galvañ for POLITICO

By Daniel Payne

11/06/2024 05:39 AM EST

Donald Trump has promised the largest deportation of immigrants in American history, sweeping new tariffs on imports, a freeze on climate-related regulations, a remaking of federal health agencies and ideological changes in the education system.

Now he gets his chance.

And Trump insiders say they believe he’ll be able to move faster than he did in his first term to accomplish those goals.

In his first term, Trump made major policy changes but often complained of bureaucracy getting in the way of his most ambitious aims.

Armed with that experience, he expects officials in his second administration will better understand how to navigate complex agencies and policy processes, making a faster — and more ambitious — agenda possible, according to Trump’s advisers.

Though some of Trump’s largest agenda items — tax breaks and Affordable Care Act changes — will take congressional approval, many won’t. The Trump administration will be able to change immigration enforcement, impose tariffs, change health regulations, intervene in overseas wars and shape the education system without help from the Hill.

The president-elect has promised to make as many as 50,000 civil servants political appointees, effectively stripping the career protections of those currently in the roles and ensuring loyalists would remain.

And Trump supporter Elon Musk said that, if he joins the administration as part of a new Department of Government Efficiency, he would find $2 trillion in budget cuts.

Trump’s policy goals don’t just look to undo the work of the Biden administration. He looks to remake policies — and the federal agencies that create them — at their core.

Here’s a look at nine policy areas under the Trump presidency — what the president-elect is proposing, and what’s actually possible.

An illustration of a migrant family making their way across land.

Immigration & the southern border

The president-elect has vowed to build huge detention camps, implement mass deportations at a scale never before seen, hire thousands more border agents, funnel military spending toward border security and invoke the Alien Enemies Act of 1798 to expel suspected members of drug cartels and criminal gangs without a court hearing.

Trump has also said he would end “catch-and-release” — the release of migrants into a U.S. community while they await their immigration court hearings — and restore Remain in Mexico, a policy from his first term that required asylum seekers to wait in Mexico while their cases were processed.

And he has sidestepped questions about whether or not he would try to bring back his controversial zero-tolerance, family separation policy that placed roughly 5,000 children in the custody of the Office of Refugee Resettlement and sent them to shelters and foster homes across the country while their parents were criminally prosecuted for crossing the border illegally.

While aggressive and sweeping in nature, there’s another common theme among these policy proposals — they’re light on details.

The president-elect hasn’t answered questions about exactly how he would round up undocumented immigrants or how he would fund his plans. Trump could also face challenges hiring extra border agents, given that the Border Patrol has long struggled with recruitment.

And courts might reject his proposal to use some of the military’s budget for border security, one of many legal roadblocks that could lie ahead for his policies.

Last go-around, a number of Trump’s immigration policies, including Remain in Mexico, faced court challenges. There was also a great deal of backlash over some of his actions, including the separation of families at the southern border.

— Myah Ward

MOST READ

election-2024-biden-35282.jpg Dems rage against Biden’s ‘arrogance’ after Harris loss The Trump agenda: Here’s what to expect from his second term Trump promised to get revenge. Here are his targets. Trump’s biggest courtroom nemesis is looking for an exit strategy Trump’s Pentagon overhaul: 8 policy changes he’s expected to make An illustration of a gloved hand holding a computer chip.

Tariffs, CHIPS manufacturing policy

Trump says “tariff” is his favorite word in the dictionary and he is likely to try to move quickly on new trade restrictions that he promised during the campaign.

The president-elect says he will impose between a 10 and 20 percent across-the-board tariff on all $3 trillion worth of U.S. goods imports and a 60 percent tariff on all Chinese goods. That would dramatically expand the duties he imposed during his first term on tens of billions of dollars worth of steel and aluminum and more than $300 billion worth of Chinese goods.

Trump and his campaign were vague about how he plans to implement that plan. Many trade experts think he could quickly draw on existing authority like the International Emergency Economic Powers Act, which gives the president sweeping authority to control economic transactions after declaring an emergency.

That could lead to a legal challenge, but a recent report from the Cato Institute, a free market think tank, cast doubt on the courts’ or Congress’ ability to rein Trump in. However, trading partners such as the EU could retaliate with tariffs on U.S. exports.

Trump is also expected to take an aggressive stance in the six-year-review of the U.S.-Mexico-Canada Agreement, which his first administration negotiated to replace NAFTA. That review officially begins in 2026, but the countries are already preparing for it. Trump could also threaten tariffs to pressure Mexico on immigration, as he did in 2019 using IEEPA.

Other possible actions, like revoking permanent normal trade relations with China or imposing a carbon-border adjustment tax, would require congressional approval. Congress could also take up trade and tariff issues as part of legislation to renew Trump’s 2017 tax cuts, which expire next year. Trump has talked about using the import tax both as a way to raise revenue and to reduce the U.S. trade deficit.

— Doug Palmer and Christine Mui


Ukraine / China / Middle East

Trump has said that he wants Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to end the war in Gaza by January should he win the presidency. Similarly, he’s insisted that the war in Ukraine needs to end, though he’s offered no pathway for how to pause the hostilities between Kyiv and Moscow.

Trump’s views on Gaza and the West Bank diverge significantly from those of the Biden administration. Where Biden has pushed for Israeli troops to ultimately leave Gaza and for Netanyahu to agree to a two-state solution, Trump has previously pushed a plan that would allow Israel to gain greater control over the Palestinians. In that plan, Trump vowed to help guide $50 billion in international investment toward the Palestinian people, helping it prop up their economy.

Trump’s son-in-law Jared Kushner was heavily involved in Trump’s Middle East policy under the last administration, helping formulate the plan for Israel and the Palestinians and brokering the Abraham Accords — a deal in which Bahrain and the UAE recognized Israel’s sovereignty. Kushner has shown no signs that he will be actively involved in a second administration (at least not publicly).

Trump’s first administration took a strong stance against Iran, implementing what was then dubbed a “maximum pressure” campaign to heavily sanction Tehran and deprive its economy of the ability to grow. The sanctions also targeted top commanders of the Iran Revolutionary Guard Corp and other high-ranking officials. Trump was responsible for killing former IRGC Commander Qassem Soleimani in a strike in January 2020. Angered by Soleimani’s death, Iran and its proxies have since vowed revenge and have even made threats to assassinate the president-elect.

Trump’s stance toward Iran is likely to influence how he approaches the wars in Gaza and Lebanon, as well as his broader Middle East policy. While Trump and Netanyahu have not been on the best of terms, it’s likely that whatever policy Trump implements to deal with Tehran and its proxies will include a significant bump in support for Israel. The two leaders have spoken in recent weeks, signaling that they’ve already been talking about a second Trump term.

Like his comments on the Middle East, Trump said he would be able to quickly achieve a peace deal in the war between Ukraine and Russia — saying during the campaign he would begin talks before taking office.

But when asked if he wanted Ukraine to win the war, he wouldn’t answer. He’s blamed Ukraine’s president, Volodymyr Zelenskyy, for the war and threatened to stop investment in the country if he wins.

Zelenskyy said he wasn’t worried about Trump’s break from decades of American foreign policy strategy, suggesting he’s just been posturing for the election. Zelenskyy visited Trump at Mar-a-Lago at the end of September.

Trump’s China policy was largely built on his broader “America first” stance. His first administration sought to reign in Chinese aggression in the trade sector, implementing harsh penalties for intellectual property theft. During the administration, Washington sought to reduce America’s alliance on Beijing and to blunt the country’s technological advancements. Trump is likely to continue that policy. The trickiest part for Trump will likely be how to manage an aggressive U.S. stance toward China without provoking Beijing.

— Erin Banco

Abortion and health care

If Trump’s true to his word, he’s about to turn health policy upside down.

Trump has promised to let vaccine skeptic Robert F. Kennedy Jr. “go wild” with health in his administration. A major health role for Kennedy would shift the Republican agenda away from policy debates over legislation and regulation toward a more fundamental one about the government’s role in medicine.

Kennedy has touted the debunked claim that vaccines cause autism, written a book accusing former NIH official Anthony Fauci of conspiring with tech mogul Bill Gates and drug makers to sell Covid vaccines, and launched a movement to “make America healthy again” by replacing officials at agencies he says are captives of the industries they regulate, eliminating “toxic additives and pesticide residues” in food, promoting alternative medicine and ending fluoridation of public water.

There will be other changes.

On abortion, Trump has tried to distance himself from his role in appointing three of the Supreme Court justices who overturned Roe v. Wade. He not only denied that he would seek federal legislation to ban or restrict abortion but also said he’d veto any ban that reached his desk.

Still, Trump won’t move to codify abortion protections under Roe or otherwise seek to make the procedure more accessible in states that have restricted it.

On Obamacare, even conservative health policy analysts who’d like to repeal the Affordable Care Act say that’s not in the cards. Instead, they say Trump will focus on loosening regulations on insurers and targeting specific elements of the law for repeal or reform. Vice President-elect JD Vance wants to cut costs for healthy, younger people by allowing them to sign up for insurance based on the health risks they face. That could increase prices for older people and those with pre-existing conditions, who are shielded from risk-based pricing under Obamacare.

Trump supported allowing Medicare to negotiate drug prices in his 2016 campaign but later backed away. Now he’s in charge of ongoing negotiations Congress mandated in the 2022 Inflation Reduction Act, which are supposed to include dozens of new drugs during his term. Every Republican lawmaker voted against that law. Trump’s Justice Department is now tasked with defending it against pharmaceutical company challenges in court.

— Daniel Payne

Student debt & college affordability

Trump has attacked Biden’s student loan initiatives as a waste of taxpayer money but has not said whether he will address mounting student debt. Many of Biden’s debt-relief plans are tied up in court, and Trump hasn’t indicated what he will do if they proceed.

The Republican Party platform, which doesn’t mention student loans, calls for firing “radical Left accreditors” to drive down tuition costs. Trump has previously advocated for replacing accrediting organizations that oversee colleges and universities and imposing new standards such as removing staff members that focus on diversity, equity and inclusion efforts.

The platform also calls for creating “more affordable alternatives to a traditional four-year college degree” and funding “proven career training programs.” But Trump wants to gut the Education Department, which provides billions of dollars in scholarships for low-income students to afford higher education.

Congress would need to approve any major dismantling of the department, but Trump could seek deep funding cuts and relocate some of its key responsibilities to other agencies.

Trump, during his first administration, submitted a 2021 budget that nixed a popular public student loan forgiveness plan. It didn’t pass, but his administration did deny almost all of the program’s applicants.

— Rebecca Carballo


Race and gender in schools

The 2024 Republican platform vowed to cut federal funds for schools that teach about race and gender, bar transgender women from women’s sports teams and deport international students who voiced support for Palestinians.

Trump could accomplish many of those promises in his next administration — even without Congress.

He has threatened to pull federal money for schools that teach certain race-related curriculum, which he could do by directing his Education Department’s Office for Civil Rights to launch investigations into schools with these classes and yank their funding.

His previous administration followed a similar playbook. Former Education Secretary Betsy DeVos’ civil rights office determined that letting transgender women play on women’s teams violated a federal anti-discrimination law known as Title IX. She used the policy to threaten a local school board with legal action or a loss of funding.

Trump has promised to overhaul Title IX and to restore a 2020 rule that guided how schools respond to reports of sexual misconduct. The Biden administration rescinded the rule, a move that’s been tied up in court. A new rule could go much further to include clarifications on what “sex” means and determine whether transgender students can play on sports teams or use facilities that align with their gender identity.

The president-elect has also promised civil rights investigations into schools that use race in admissions and vowed to reinstate his 1776 Commission, which seeks to “promote fair and patriotic civics education.”

— Bianca Quilantan

Climate

Trump could bring a big freeze this January — a regulatory freeze. As soon as he takes office on Jan. 20, the president-elect is expected to reverse work on Biden’s aggressive climate change agenda that aimed to reduce fossil fuel use and reduce greenhouse gas emissions. Instead, Trump has vowed to save the nation’s aging fleet of coal-fired power plants and boost production of oil and natural gas, although the U.S. is already producing those fuels at record levels.

But the process of repealing and replacing Biden’s rules can be lengthy. Trump’s EPA was sometimes criticized for moving too slowly in 2017, but lessons learned in the first term could mean those he appoints move faster now.

There are some added twists this time around on key climate rules. Trump’s power plant climate rule was struck down in 2021 — coincidentally, on his last full day in office. Trump’s rule would have required coal-fired power plants make minor adjustments to improve their efficiency. A federal appeals court said EPA should have at least considered other regulatory possibilities such as carbon capture, the technology that now forms the basis of Biden’s replacement rule. That 2021 court ruling has technically been vacated, but it’s something his legal team may keep in mind moving forward.

Trump also can’t completely repeal Biden’s big methane rule that requires the oil and gas sector to crack down on its leaks of the potent greenhouse gas. Trump did a full repeal in his first term, but Congress since then has essentially required EPA to regulate. However, he can make a suite of tweaks desired by industry.

— Alex Guillén

An illustration of several small houses.

Housing

Trump has pledged to ease regulations to help builders boost the supply of housing in a bid to bring down costs. The Republican National Committee also endorsed the idea of selling off federal lands for the construction of housing, which Utah Republicans have pushed in Congress.

The first Trump administration worked to recapitalize Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, the two government-controlled companies backing roughly half of the nation’s residential mortgages. But the plan to eventually release and privatize the government-sponsored enterprises ran aground when the pandemic struck. Now, depending on who Trump picks to lead the Treasury Department and the Federal Housing Finance Agency, the administration may have another shot.

— Katy O’Donnell

An illustration of a hand reaching to take money from another hand.

Taxes

Trump coasted through his campaign without much of a plan for next year’s battle royale over taxes, but he will soon have to face reality.

Tax cuts worth $4.6 trillion from Trump’s first term are set to expire at the end of 2025. Trump has pledged to make those tax cuts permanent, while at the same time proposing wide-ranging new cuts – from ending taxation of tips to allowing a deduction for auto-loan interest.

Congress will have to figure out which of his proposals are doable — even as they try to come up with the money to reup the expiring tax cuts currently on the books.

Those breaks mostly affect individual taxpayers, and nearly everyone’s taxes would rise if they are allowed to lapse at the end of next year.

Lawmakers will have to determine how much in total they intend to spend on a tax bill — a basic question that could take time to sort out. They are deeply divided over what to do about the government’s $2 trillion deficit.Trump wants to finance income tax cuts with tariff increases. It’s true that protectionist sentiment is on the rise in Congress, but many lawmakers are likely to balk at the steep tariffs Trump has proposed.

Republicans might also try to rescind Democrats’ green energy tax breaks, though some have become fans of the provisions, so that could be difficult as well. There are other, more gimmicky, ways Republicans could try to reduce costs, like a shorter extension of their tax cuts.

— Brian Faler