VietPress USA (28/4/2017): President Donald Trump passed first 100 days of Presidency. It is good or bad according to your judgement. Please read this topic from the New York Times published at the following link for your information:
https://www.nytimes.com/2017/04/26/opinion/donald-trumps-first-100-days-the-worst-on-record.html?_r=0
VietPress USA.
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Donald Trump’s First 100 Days: The Worst on Record
Franklin D. Roosevelt invented the idea of a president’s
first 100 days. Roosevelt was actually referring to the first 100 days of a
special Congressional session to fight the Great Depression, as Robert Speel of
Penn State notes. But the idea soon came to mean the 100 days that start on
Jan. 20 and that, for President Trump, will end on Saturday.
No doubt, you’ve seen a torrent of coverage in recent days
of the milestone. And while it’s certainly an arbitrary milestone, it’s also a
meaningful one. Presidents are at their most influential in their early months,
which makes that period a particularly important one for a presidency.
Here’s my reading of Trump’s start: It’s the least
successful first 100 days since the concept existed.
Even if you forget about the content of his actions —
whether they strengthened or weakened the country — and focus only on how much
he accomplished, it’s a poor beginning. His supporters deserve to be
disappointed, and his opponents should be cheered by how unsuccessful his
agenda has been so far.
Before now, the weakest starts probably belonged to Bill
Clinton and to John F. Kennedy. Partly as a result, neither of them ended up
being as consequential presidents as, say, Lyndon B. Johnson, Ronald Reagan or
Barack Obama. And yet Trump’s first 100 days have been vastly weaker than
Clinton’s or Kennedy’s:
Trump has made no significant progress on any major
legislation. His health care bill is a zombie. His border wall is stalled. He’s
only now releasing basic principles of a tax plan. Even his executive order on
immigration is tied up in the courts. By contrast, George W. Bush and Ronald
Reagan had made substantial progress toward passing tax cuts, and Barack Obama
had passed, among other things, a huge stimulus bill that also addressed
education and climate policy.
Trump is far behind staffing his administration. Trump has
made a mere 50 nominations to fill the top 553 positions of the executive
branch, as of Friday. That’s right: He hasn’t even nominated anyone for 90
percent of its top jobs. The average president since 1989 had nominated twice
as many, according to the Partnership for Public Service.
Every weekday, get thought-provoking commentary from Op-Ed
columnists, the Times editorial board and contributing writers from around the
world.
Part of the reason is a lack of execution: The
administration has been slow to make nominations. And part of the reason is who
is being nominated: A disproportionate number of affluent investors and
business executives with many potential conflicts of interest that require vetting.
Either way, the effects are real. The executive branch can’t push through the
president’s priorities if it doesn’t have his people in place.
The Trump administration is more nagged by scandal than any
previous administration. No new administration has dealt with a potential
scandal anywhere near as large or as distracting as the Russia investigation.
It could recede over time, true. But it also could come to dominate the Trump
presidency.
Trump has no clear foreign policy. Is he protectionist, as
he appeared to be when starting a trade spat with Canada on Tuesday, or a
globalist, as he appeared when backing off his criticism of China? Is he an isolationist,
an interventionist or some alternative? No one seems to know, which confuses
allies and does a favor for rivals who would welcome diminished American
influence.
Trump is by far the least popular new president in the
modern polling era. His approval rating is just 41 percent, according to
FiveThirtyEight. All other elected presidents since Roosevelt have had an
approval rating of at least 53 percent after 100 days. (Gerald Ford was at 45
percent.) Some, including Obama, Reagan and Johnson, have been above 60
percent.
Trump’s low approval isn’t only a reflection of his
struggles. It also becomes a cause of further struggles. Members of Congress
aren’t afraid to buck an unpopular president, which helps explain the collapse
of Trumpcare.
Obviously, Trump can claim some successes on his own terms.
Most consequentially, he has named a Supreme Court justice who could serve for
decades. Trump has also put in place some meaningful executive orders, on
climate policy above all, and he has allied the federal government with the
cause of white nationalism, as Jonathan Chait wrote.
Trump remains the most powerful person in the country, if
not the world. It would be foolish for anyone to be complacent about what he
can do. Yet by the modern standards of the office, he is a weak president off
to a uniquely poor start.
It’s worth considering one final point, too. So far, I’ve
been judging him on his own terms. History, of course, will not. And I expect
that a couple of his biggest so-called accomplishments — aggravating climate
change and treating nonwhite citizens as less than fully American — are likely
to be judged very harshly one day.
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Hạnh Dương
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