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Trump pushes presidential limits in first 100 days


President Donald Trump gestured at a rally in Novi, Michigan, USA on October 26, 2024.
President Donald Trump gestured at a rally in Novi, Michigan, USA on October 26, 2024.
  • Trump pushes U.S. presidential power almost to the limits of empire
  • “Trump 2.0 is higher than Trump 1.0”: Political historian
  • The US president launched an unprecedented attack on the world order.

With Donald Trump back to the White House, you never know what you will get. Will he condemn foreign leaders? Rock and roll global market? Revenge on his enemies?

But after his first 100 days of chaos, Trump almost restricted the power of the U.S. president.

“I think the second semester is stronger,” the 78-year-old Republican said at a recent event. “They do it-when I say do it, they do it, right?”

Trump was driven by dissatisfactions left out by an undisciplined first term, ending in the shame of the 2021 Capitol riots, elected Joe Biden.

When Trump released hundreds of attackers from prison on his first day in office, he did not capture prisoners when it came to consolidate the White House power.

Matt Dallek, political historian at George Washington University AFP.

Trump also strengthened the sense of an endless reality show in which he signed execution orders and asked questions from journalists in the Oval Office almost every day.

This order unleashed an unprecedented attack on the cornerstone of American democracy and the world order.

“We certainly haven’t seen such a constant attack in modern times to relax constitutional safeguards,” Dalek added.

‘brazen’

Trump has been controversially helped by Elon Musk, the world’s wealthiest man, who has pushed his efforts as part of the liberal “deep state” of the federal government.

He invoked hundreds of years of wartime bills to deport immigrants to a large prison in El Salvador, while warning that American citizens could be the next one.

He poached the confrontation with the judge and forced the punishment deal for law firms involved in previous criminal or civil cases.

He broke the media in the media (he remains the “enemy of the people”) and had limited opportunities to cover his news outlets in the White House.

He has launched an ideological purge, cut diversity programs, targeted universities, and even served as head of prestigious art centers.

The U.S. Congress aims to have ultimate control over the government’s wallet strings, but has been eliminated. Republicans taught him the power to grab, while overwhelming Democrats struggled to call up a response.

Republican Senator Lisa Murkowski recently said: “We are all scared.”

“The president seems to have a formal, even constitutional checkpoint,” added Barbara Trish, professor of political science at Grinnell College.

On the foreign stage, Trump has made territorial claims against Greenland, Panama and Canada and advocated a field of influence to echo Bent, an expansionist of Russian President Vladimir Putin.

At the same time, Trump has been supported by a court of true believers. Aides with often marginal views, such as Health Secretary Robert Kennedy, who is suspected of vaccines, took turns praising him at cabinet meetings.

Trish added: “The president is completely surrounded by aides compared to the first semester, who not only helps to promote, but in some cases catalyze his strong strength.”

“Instinctively”

But Trump’s comeback highlights some familiar themes.

According to Gallup, Trump is ratings with approvals that are much lower than those of all other World War II presidents, but during his first term, Trump’s approval rate is much lower than that of approval.

From 2017 to 2021, the world has seen signs of the same turbulent leader.

Trump had a wild television crash in the Oval Office with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky, who taught to the Oval Office, deeply shocked allies who had been dissatisfied with Russia’s hub.

He then introduced global tariffs, just to reverse many of them, and in the global market proved to be the only real check of his power.

When asked how he reached a decision on tariffs, Trump replied: “Just instinctively.”

The question now is whether Trump once called himself the “king” on his truth social platform, whether he is willing to give up power.

Trump recently said he “doesn’t joke” when he repeatedly mentions the third term of the Constitution.



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