It’s official, Donald J. Trump, as of 12:01 p.m. this past Monday, is now the 47th president of the United States, in a country that is still divided, but with his key goal of migrant removal seemingly approved. And, Washington was replete with American flags flapping in the frigid weather, and Republicans lost no time in cris crossing the capital in a show of solidarity, culminating in celebratory parties from Georgetown to Kalorama, two of Washington’s toniest neighborhoods.
His comeback is considered remarkable, but it is no surprise to his base who championed him far and wide. What can be questioned is if he has a mandate, and while true enough that he won the popular vote this time, the win was by approximately 1,000 votes; the electoral college notwithstanding 51.2 percent versus Harris at 47.8.
What is now apparent is that Trump will do his utmost to promote his agenda, and the highlights are: immigration first, and foremost, closing the border, deporting illegal immigrants, and especially those who have committed crimes; dismantling DEI requirements in the federal government and the military; and, putting 25 percent tariffs on Mexico and Canada.
In a demonstration of his will, Trump immediately signed a slew of executive orders, and one stating that there are only two genders, male and female, an opening salvo in the battle for transgendered rights.
Perhaps to no one’s surprise he also pulled the US out of the Paris Climate Accord, and the World Health Organization, whom he and other Republicans have criticized for their efforts in public health facing the COVID pandemic.
Next up is the slimming down of the federal bureaucracy, one that he called bloated, and who critics fear he will fill with loyalists. And, while that has not been seen yet, a look at the fact that Trump has remodeled the Republican Party in own image, it's not an empty promise, and on Tuesday, the day after he was inaugurated, he had all Diversity Equity and Inclusion employees in the federal government place on paid leave effective Wednesday,
Perhaps, the most pressing changes are not the promised deportation, as controversial as they are, but the pardon or commutations of the 1500 Jan 6 protestors who stormed the US Capitol building, breaking windows and threatening to hang his vice president, Mike Pence, and to drag Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi from her office
Capitol Hill officers who were guarding both the building, and them, were bombarded with batons, bats, and pepper spray, resulting in the death of Officer Brian Misnick, whose heart could not withstand the sheer physical and mental effort he put forth to defend the building, and its occupants.
It is notable that Trump’s then running mate, and now Vice President, JD Vance said he would not do so, have now created a dilemma for the new administration, albeit an unintended consequence of a campaign promise, if not now, then later.
While some Republicans have said that eventually these pardons will fade into the background, it is at odds with the wholesale support of police officers across the nation, by the party, and their supporters.
The promise of mass deportations, roughly estimated to be 12 million undocumented people, has created fear in many of America’s largest, and Democratic cities; but, especially in Chicago, where the designated Border Czar, Tom Homan said will begin in Chicago, has raised the threat level among many undocumented people, despite their age, and socio economic status.
While the popular conception is that undocumented workers are all from Mexico, that is not true, and there are many Indians from South East Asia, China and Vietnam, working across a variety of places in the city.
While below zero temperatures in many parts of the country may have hampered Homan’s efforts, the fear factor remains, especially when the Department of Homeland Security’s Acting Secretary Benjamine Huffman recently changed the rule that schools and churches, once off limits for Immigration and Customs Enforcement arrests, can now be made.
Those efforts culminated in a perceived threat by ICE officials in an elementary school on Chicago’s South Side, Hamline, that later proved to be the Secret Service searching for a public official that they were to guard, but who had disappeared, only to be told later that he was at the school. While that initial report proved to be false, it has put the city on cautious alert, and both Mayor Brandon Johnson, and Governor JB Pritzker have vowed to not support ICE efforts at deportations, with Johnson saying, “We’re going to fight and stand up for working people. That’s what Chicago is known for.”
“Both Chicago and Illinois laws prevent local law enforcement from asking about a person’s immigration status, detaining them because they lack statute and notably, largely bar officers from cooperating with federal agents. There is an exception if ICE agents are looking for individuals with federal criminal lawsuits,” reported local PBS affiliate WBEZ.
Several alder people have sponsored “Know Your Rights” seminars, and some local churches have also done the same, perhaps in response to the plea for mercy from the Episcopal bishop of Washington, the Rev. Mariann Budde in a National Prayer Service, where she told the president, in her sermon, that many people were scared of his policies, and noting that many undocumented people were not criminals, but hard working people.
There are reports of a flight to Guatemala deporting immigrants from the US, approximately 265, on three flights, and one charter, that country said.
Reports of planes to Mexico carrying deportations have not been verified, as of this date; but, Mexico has established tent cities along the border to welcome any Meixans that are deported, and give them health care, and take care of other needs.
Trump’s agenda has been well established along the campaign trail
All of these moves has angered Democrats, left leaning politicians and their supporters; but, in reality this should also not come as a surprise to them, but as the famous entomologist William Safirre once wrote in his New York Times Magazine column, “the proof of the pudding is in the eating.”
One of the most controversial of Trump’s executive orders is the repeal of the 14th Amendment of the right, not a banishment, of the Constitution, which states that anyone born in the United States is a citizen. Trump says that this can no longer be unless one parent is a citizen.
Supporters have said on social media that this is a redefinition, not a banishment, but wordsmithing may not hold much weight with constitutional law.
This denial would affect hundreds of millions of people, and has already frightened many families; but, one that might prove to go to the Supreme Court, and we have been told, on background, is the very intention of the new president.
However, reaching back to the civics classes of yore: to change the Constitution of the United States, Congress must call a convention for the proposal of an amendment, after an application of the state legislatures, by two thirds, 34 of the current 50 states, and become valid “only when ratified by the legislatures of, or conventions in, three fourths of the states, (i.e. 38 of 50 states), according to the National Conference of State Legislatures.
On Thursday US District Judge John C. Coughenour,according to the Associated Press, “temporarily blocked” the order, “in the case brought by the states of Washington, Arizona, Illinois and Oregon, which argue the 14th Amendment and Supreme Court Case law have cemented birthright citizenship.”
It’s important to note that executive actions are not legislation, and can be undone by succeeding presidents, but despite either the intent, or the results, this is Trump’s moment.
One cause of concern: Trump is 78, not too much younger than his predecessor, Joe Biden, and with a 40 year old vice president to succeed him, the agenda that is Trump’s could be with the country for a long time.
Then again, it might take years to have the Trump agenda codified, for example the dismantling of the DEI office and employees; and, as Noreen Farrell the executive director of Equal Rights, a gender rights group, told the AP, “the reality of implementing such massive structural changes is far more complex.”
The DEI programs had a far ranging effort to help Black majority neighborhoods, “credits for minority farmers,” as well as increasing hiring opportunities for racial minorities, and women.
To note, the initial 2022 rapport released by the federal DEI for the federal workforce, said that it was, “about 60 percent white and 55 percent male overall, and more than 75 percent white and more than 60 percent male at the senior executive level.”
These executive orders are just the tip of the iceberg, administration officials state, and as the nation responds with cheers, and jeers, it’s apparent that Trump is back, and the nation, and the world, is on edge in anticipation of the future.