.
"Mr. Trump
makes good on his promises. The pace of the game may be dizzying and
even disorienting, but it’s necessary and long overdue to eliminate the
gridlock that paralyzes the governing class....His buckling down as the workman who gets things
done, as he said he would, is a novelty and perhaps a precedent for
Washington....The new president now takes on the challenge that has
sapped the resolve of presidents since Ronald Reagan, cutting down the
regulatory leviathan."
1/31/17, "Trump’s no-huddle offense," Washington Times Editorial Board
"The
opening whistle has hardly faded to an echo, and President Trump has
spread his receivers and hitting his targets. Good to his word, he
is executing a White House game plan with a no-huddle offense. It’s
driven his adversaries to angry frustration. He’s winning, and they’re
not.
He’s determined to keep America safe, and no apology. His
generals won swift Senate confirmation to lead the departments of
Defense and Homeland Security. The president signed an executive order
temporarily restricting immigration from terrorist preserves, including
Iraq, Iran, Syria, Yemen, Libya, Somalia and Sudan, a list of bad places
drawn up earlier by Barack Obama and his administration.
Predictably,
the temporary ban on travelers from those nations set off protests at
airports in New York, Los Angeles, Seattle and elsewhere. Senate
Minority Leader Charles Schumer, New York Democrat, rushed to the
microphones to display manufactured tears and to declare, “This
executive order was mean-spirited and un-American.” The drama outside
the airport terminals outweighed the effects of the temporary bans
inside, where 109 of the 325,000 foreign arriving travelers suffered
brief inconvenience.
The gamers of radical change, angered by Trump energy and determination, are trying to amp up rage. While legions of
demonstrators take to the streets, lawyers hurry to the courtroom to
counter the president’s initiatives. A lawsuit filed on a Saturday
morning attempted to block the immigration order, and lawyers speculate
that the demonstrations are largely the handiwork of organizations
funded by radical billionaire George Soros, who seems eager to burn
through his considerable booty to torch the Trump agenda.
Above street level, Mr. Trump is at work getting acquainted with his peers. The new president’s
conversations with British Prime Minister Theresa May, restoring the
“special relationship” to its previous place of honor in the nation’s
diplomacy, inevitably evoked the rapport between Ronald Reagan and
Margaret Thatcher of a generation ago. He retrieved a bust of Winston
Churchill, the British leader during World War II, from a closet where
Barack Obama had exiled it. The restoration to a place of honor in the
Oval Office underscores the importance of “the special relationship.”
The
president’s conversation with Russian President Vladimir Putin seemed
in answer to media and academic suspicion that Moscow tried to throw the
November election to Mr. Trump.
They talked of goals they might achieve mutually, such as defeating the
Islamic State and radical Islamic terrorism, Russia’s conflict with
Ukraine and the pact in the West that preserves Iran’s nuclear program.
He spoke to Germany’s Angela Merkel, President Francois Hollande of
France and Prime Minister Shinzo Abe of Japan. Not a bad day’s work.
Americans are familiar with the Donald’s needling of his adversaries,
having watched him dispatch his Republican challengers, one by one, and
then Hillary Clinton. His buckling down as the workman who gets things
done, as he said he would, is a novelty and perhaps a precedent for
Washington.
The new president now takes on the challenge that has
sapped the resolve of presidents since Ronald Reagan, cutting down the
regulatory leviathan. His “one in, two out” order demands that agencies
trying to impose new regulations on Americans must first terminate two
existing rules. The net financial burden, he said, should be zero. The
benefit for small businesses will be “the biggest such act that our
country has ever seen,” Mr. Trump says.
This is fundamental transformation. While his liberal opponents sob and simmer, Mr. Trump
makes good on his promises. The pace of the game may be dizzying and
even disorienting, but it’s necessary and long overdue to eliminate the
gridlock that paralyzes the governing class."
....................
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