Mr. Trump, keep your campaign promises if you hope to be re-elected

When a presidential candidate, any presidential candidate, campaigns and makes promises to the American citizens of the national constituency who support him, and they end up voting for that candidate, those voters expect that person to fulfill those campaign promises. Currently, Donald J. Trump is floundering terribly during his first year as US President in following through on the promises he made to the Republican, Tea Party and Independent voters that upended the 2017 presidential election by electing him. ; and preventing a corrupt democrat from being elected. Those voters are also the ones who elected the majority of Republicans in the US House of Representatives and Senate. Trump’s highly descriptive language that he has used to describe what he intended to do as President and CEO of the US to eliminate the federal status quo in Washington, DC, as “draining the swamp” and “riding the Republic of the political swamp creatures (illicit politician)” that have corrupted the federal government, enthused the voters who placed him in office. These hard-working grassroots patriots have hoped for a dynamic shift of constitutional power back to the states, in accordance with the Tenth Amendment, from an abusive and regulatory federal government. Yet this vision of a severe reduction in federal power and regulation has not been realized since Trump took office and the president’s promises to end illegal immigration, build a wall on the southern border, end DACA, and many more. other priorities established during his tenure. campaign, which are of paramount importance to Republican and Tea Party voters, have not stuck.

Mr. Trump needs to realize that what he was given by concerned Republican, Tea Party and independent voters was not only a victory in 2017 as US President, but also, and much more important, a mandate to fulfill. their promises. That is, Trump must realize the salient and dangerous fact that if he wants to be re-elected to a second term as president and continue to enjoy the support of a Republican-controlled Congress, he will have to change the way he is doing things. . Currently, as of Friday, March 23, 2018, President Trump needs to understand that he will definitely lose the support of the Republican, Tea Party, and Independent voters who elected him in 2017 if he signs the $1.3 trillion spending bill into law that it has passed the Republican-controlled House and Senate. But that’s not all he’ll lose! His signing of this bill will allow the liberal opposition minority party to get whatever they want, which will be inexorably detrimental to the republic. Above all, the signing of this bill will diminish the support of so many Trump voters in a Republican congress and ensure that Democrats retake majority status in the House and Senate during the midterm elections.

Mr. Trump desperately needs to learn and heed the history of the splendid lesson taught by the great President Andrew Jackson during the time he served two presidential terms, from 1829 to 1837. The important lesson Jackson taught future presidential candidates, through his demeanor as president, he was, “keep your campaign promises.” I have compared Donald Trump to Andrew Jackson in his bid, over different centuries, for the presidency and winning the trust of the common voter, and there are numerous similarities. The comparison established a very important similarity, which was Trump’s independent voice calling for change during his campaign. Andrew Jackson campaigned primarily on the evil of the Bank of the United States, the precursor to the Federal Reserve Act, and Trump campaigned on the evils of illegal immigration, DACA, and unconstitutional federal regulatory power. Jackson’s campaign promises to nullify and end the Bank of the United States made sense to voters in 1829, and Trump’s promise to end illegal immigration by building a wall, ending DACA, and draining the federal swamp, o Washington, DC, made a lot of sense to many more voters in 2017, Republicans, Democrats, Tea Party and Independents. By keeping his campaign promises, Andrew Jackson won re-election in 1833, and Mr. Trump must realize that he was chosen to do the job he represented, during his campaign, that he was going to do. The president needs to stop trying to entertain his electorate with his colorful bargaining chip and television savvy. Rather, he needs to be serious about doing what he was elected to do and remember that he is in a filthy swamp that needs to be drastically drained, and his creatures have to be eliminated, not Las Vegas, and that he is the president, and not wayne. Newton.

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