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Michigan Rally: Trump's well -known symptoms, an ebullic amount and a difficult task ahead of us


Warren, Michigan
Cnn

On the 100th day he gathered.

Trump crossed the symbolic barrier between the first 100 days of his presidency and the remaining 1,361 days, and met from a supporting crowd and explained that he had just completed the “most successful first 100 days of every administration in the history of our country”. He dared nostalgically about his last act with familiar complaints and hyperbolic claims and took the moment to set the next course for the next.

However, the events of the day only illustrate that difficult tasks remain for all measures that he has so far remained.

Before he arrived in Michigan, Trump had taken steps to withdraw from the car tariffs that he had introduced weeks earlier, and the warnings of auto executives and analysts, the tasks could give thousands of dollars at the price of a new car.

And he had spent the morning too angry about a report in which Amazon could possibly list collective bargaining price on his popular market. He gave a warning to the founder Jeff Bezos and explained the move hostile (Amazon said after Trump calls the plan was only an idea and would not be implemented).

The President leads an increasingly skeptical public. His 41% approval assessment in CNN's latest survey is the worst for every modern president at the 100-day mark. His 39% approval for dealing with the economy marks a career low.

But surrounded by characters that explained this “golden age” at the MACAMB Community College in Warren, Michigan, Trump – and his followers – were ebull.

“We just started,” said the President. “You haven't seen anything yet.”

Trump delivered confidante riffs about “Sleepy Joe”, an allusion to former President Joe Biden for over an hour and a half. He put on applause from the crowd when he blamed the former Vice President Kamala Harris, whom he described as a “great candidate”. And he repeated the greatest dirt of choice of elections 2020.

“I miss you,” said Trump. “I missed the campaign.”

When the White House devotes its full attention to the legislative agenda of the President, with a deadline for his budget and tax plan in July, Trump spent very little time in the next 100 days that could play a major role in the definition of his presidency. He hardly mentioned the economic fears that burdened his public approval, although his visit to Michigan highlighted his scooter coaster approach for tariffs, which in his long-term belief in the revival of American production.

The next chapter of this challenge is not yet, since Trump's demands of the car manufacturers who argue that his tariffs could cause deep economic pain with the interests of the working class for which he should work for. But in his story, his developing tax and tariff movements had convinced the car manufacturers to “return to Michigan and build cars”.

“You finally have a champion for workers in the White House,” said Trump. “Instead of putting China in the first place, I put Michigan the first place and put America in the first place.”

Trump welcomed his Hardline immigration policy as a characteristic performance – one of the greatest “promises that are kept out of his campaign” – and in an interview that was later broadcast ABC, he threw doubts about the idea that those who are supposedly in the country illegally earn illegally.

“When people come to our country illegally, there is another standard. … You get a process in which we have to get them out,” he continued. “You get everything my lawyers say.”

At the rally, he claimed to have terminated bidens “insane electric vehicle mandate”, although there had never been a federal decree that forbids the Americans the purchase of petrol cars. He claimed that he knows “much more” than the chairman of the Federal Reserve, with which he came up with the interest rates. He said that he would stop the “sauce train” for “Deep State BuraCrats”, but later ABC, he was considering reversing some of the cuts that were implemented by his department of government efficiency.

In the first three months of his presidency, Trump was something like a home body and spent most of the time in the White House or one of his houses and golf courses in Florida or New Jersey. When he stayed on stage on Tuesday evening at the end of the rally, he seemed to enjoy being back in the aura, which has dominated almost a decade of political life.

“We will never return. We will never surrender,” said Trump. “We will fight, fight, fight and we will win together. Together we will make America powerful again.”

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