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Trump travels to Michigan to mark in office 100 days

President Trump plans to travel to Michigan on Tuesday on the 100th day of his second term in order to maintain consecutive events that are supposed to demonstrate his commitment to the heart of the American production, at a time when many people are dissatisfied with his economic agenda.

Mr. Trump plans to visit the Selfridge Air National Guard Base, whose future has been uncertain in recent years. He said that he worked with local officials to keep Selfridge open and swore an infusion of new resources such as fighter planes at the base.

After that, the president will travel to the MACAMB Community College, where he speaks of supporters at a rally, in the hope of getting his economic policy.

It is no coincidence that Mr. Trump travels to the area that is most associated with the loss of American manufacturing jobs. Detroit, the home of the US car industry, has lost a third of its population since 2000.

The trip comes at a crucial time for Mr. Trump's presidency.

Its expansive tariffs violated the stock market and contributed to a decline in its approval rate. A majority of the Americans approved Mr. Trump's official performance during January and February, but he is now fighting with more people who disapproved.

In a recent survey by the New York Times/Siena College, the voters said that he had “gone too far” after the issue: his tariffs, his immigration enforcement, his cuts to the federal work powers.

Against this background, Mr. Trump's journey is supposed to send a message that he is committed to Americans who have been left behind by globalization. It is expected that he is committed to ending with American jobs in unfairly unfair trade policy, and he plans to highlight the support of the United Auto workers for his tariff policy.

It is also expected that the president speaks about his approach to immigration, which has caused border crossings to decrease strongly, but also concerns about a lack of proper procedure for those who have been accused of violating laws.

Mr. Trump plans to fill himself as a man of the campaign and to emphasize the quick pace of his executive contracts. This year he signed 137 Executive Orders, almost as many as his predecessor Joseph R. Biden Jr., in office during his four years.

But 50 percent of voters in the Times/Siena survey said that the upheaval that Mr. Trump had brought into the nation's political and economic systems was a “bad thing”. Only 36 percent stated that the changes were good.

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