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In Trumps 100 days, mastiff, the tariffs changed the conversation


While progressive is louder and louder, millions of ordinary Americans with President Donald Trump and his agenda remain the fast and dramatic change. I am one of them.

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President Donald Trump did more good for the United States in his first 100 days in the White House than Joe Biden in four years.

A large part of the mainstream news media, full of journalists with a left prejudices, portrays the Trump presidency as a chaotic catastrophe. Trump was smeared, despised and referred to as authoritarian. If the messages have a hint, America has already declined sharply from Trump due to the first 100 days.

But I would like to show another side of what we have developed since January 20 when Trump was moved at an extraordinary pace to implement guidelines for which 77.3 million Americans voted in November. These measures will improve our lives in time and strengthen our nation.

Doges mission to convey tax responsibility is of crucial importance

If I had to describe Trump's first 100 days in just four letters, it would be Doge. The Ministry of Government, led by Elon Musk, has taken on the Herculean task of assuming a federal government that does not blink in trillion dollars -deficits.

Doges critics run the cold for every cut to the bloated bureaucracy, but nobody has offered a credible alternative.

Democrats have become the party of the status quo, and the status quo respected financial experts who predict the economic catastrophe for the United States if we do not shorten the deficit and slow down the growth of state debt.

As the Cato Institute found, Musk undertook with his goal of reducing the federal expenses by 2 trillion dollars. However, do not miss something remarkable that Musk and Trump did in just three months: The way of thinking in Washington was for years that deficits and debts are not really important that bureaucracy will grow without failure, that taxpayers only have to absorb them and pay more to keep the federal expenditure machine.

This way of thinking was now back to reality. Federal workers and entire bureaucracies have to justify their work – just like most ordinary American workers. And the expectation of endless state growth has disappeared.

Trump's tariffs show signs that they work

Trump's tariffs have lit a fire storm of criticism and triggered predictions of a recession. However, there were signs that the tariffs bring jobs back to America. Here are some examples:

  • On April 10, Swiss Drugmaker Novartis announced an investment of 23 billion US dollars for expanding production and research in the USA over five years. The company estimated that it will add 4,000 jobs here.
  • Honda Motor has announced that the production of his Civic Hybrid floating rearback back to America to America.
  • In February, the pharmaceutical manufacturer Eli Lilly announced that it would build four pharmaceutical production facilities in the United States. The company stated that the expansion will create 13,000 jobs in production and in the construction sector.

In addition to his big initiatives, Trump also signed executive orders for obscure, but important matters that modernize the government and strengthen the economy. One of the commands will end the outdated practice in our government, exhibit and accept paper controls.

Trump also ordered the creation of a Bitcoin reserve and a digital asset camp that was managed by the financial department.

The goal of these and other executive orders and others is to modernize and rationalize the government, which is far too often with the speed of the snail mail in a nation that expects delivery overnight.

Trump is still much more popular than bidges

In order to hear Trump's critics on the left and in the mainstream media, the first 100 days of the president brought us to the brink of economic ruin and an authoritarian dystopia.

But while Trump's approval rate has dropped since he took office, far more Americans say that Trump did a good job in January than the same about President Joe Biden – 45.3% for Trump compared to 36% for bidges.

While progressive screaming louder in the emptiness, millions of ordinary Americans remain on Trump and his agenda of the fast and dramatic change. I am one of them.

The story will show that Trump's first 100 days affected a flash of politics epic. I didn't think he could push so much change so quickly, but he has it and I'm happy.

Nicole Russell is a columnist at USA Today and mother of four children who lives in Texas. Contact you at nrussell@gannett.com and follow her on X, formerly Twitter: @Russell_nm. Register here for your weekly newsletter, the right track.

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