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Economics

Who will stop Donald Trump’s drive for unchecked power?

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IT WAS APRIL 28th 2017, the 99th day of his first administration, and President Donald Trump was frustrated. “It’s a very rough system, it’s an archaic system,” he vented to an interviewer about working with Congress to pass legislation. Avoiding this nuisance, he mused, would be “for the good of the nation”. Now that he is president for the second time, Mr Trump has decided to dispense with the archaic system. These first 100 days have been different from those of any modern president, who is usually desperate to secure some signature legislative achievement. Mr Trump has shown little interest in Congress, despite Republican control of both the House of Representatives and the Senate. He is wielding the imperial powers of the presidency to do what he likes: impose some of the highest tariff increases ever seen; shred the federal bureaucracy; and cudgel his adversaries. Yet despite a dearth of notable legislative accomplishments, Mr Trump’s first 100 days have hardly been a failure. They are arguably the most consequential of any modern president.

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Economics

America’s poster-in-chief is very, very online

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Compared with his first term, Donald Trump writes less about the economy and more about himself

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Economics

Donald Trump hopes to become a one-man deregulator

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Few Republican politicians dare criticise Donald Trump publicly, but many harbour doubts about the president’s violations of party orthodoxy on economics and foreign policy. One issue, however, can still unite Trumpian populists and Reaganites: deregulation. Early on the president has brought the same enthusiasm for paring back the administrative state as in his first term, but this time he is defying norms to get the work done faster.

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Economics

How Donald Trump plans to ramp up deportations

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IT HAS BEEN hard to keep track of the blitz of new immigration policies that President Donald Trump has introduced since taking office in January. During the first 100 days of his second presidency he has tried to end birthright citizenship; used war powers to deport alleged gang members to El Salvador; revoked the visas of more than 1,700 international students and recent graduates; and classified some 6,000 migrants as dead in order to cancel their Social Security cards and encourage them to self-deport. That is just a short list.

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