Factbox: Trump's enduring legacy, from foreign policy to the U.S.
judiciary
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[October 30, 2020]
(Reuters) - Saying he knew best what
ailed America and often governing by executive order, President Donald
Trump dismantled or disrupted multilateral pacts, overhauled tax and
immigration systems and, with the help of Senate Republicans, reshaped
the judiciary.
Trump's actions may be undone in many areas over time, but win or lose,
his legacy will endure in the federal courts where his conservative
lifetime appointees will influence every aspect of American life for
decades.
His record will be put to the test on Tuesday, Election Day, when
Democrat Joe Biden challenges him for the White House.
THE JUDICIARY
Working in lockstep with the Republican-controlled Senate, Trump may
have the longest-lasting impact on the federal courts with judicial
appointees who tilt to the right.
In less than four years, Trump has appointed three justices to the
Supreme Court, a feat last achieved by President Richard Nixon, who
appointed four in his first four years. The nation's highest court now
has a solid 6-3 conservative majority.
Trump has appointed 53 judges to federal appeals courts, just under a
third of the total. By comparison, former President Barack Obama
appointed 55 in his two four-year terms. Trump has appointed about a
quarter of district court judges, the lowest rung on the federal
judicial ladder.
The appointments, all for life, have led to the ideological “flip” of
three of the country’s 13 federal appeals courts, one level below the
Supreme Court. The Atlanta-based 11th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, the
Manhattan-based 2nd Circuit and the Philadelphia-based 3rd Circuit all
had Democratic-appointed majorities when Trump became president in 2017.
Trump’s success on judges would not have been possible without
Republican Senator Mitch McConnell, who made judicial nominations a
priority as majority leader of the Senate, which confirms such
appointments.
Cases before the courts span from divisive social issues including
abortion, gay rights and the death penalty to voting rights, regulatory
and business disputes, employment law and environmental concerns.
CLIMATE
Trump entered the White House promising to reverse Obama-era efforts to
fight climate change as part of a broader strategy to slash
environmental red tape that he viewed as an obstacle to business and to
the U.S. fossil fuel industry in particular.
He initiated the U.S. withdrawal from the 2015 Paris Agreement, the
international accord to fight global warming, ceding Washington's
historic role as a leader in coordinated efforts to counter climate
change. The retreat meant the United States abandoned its pledge to
slash emissions by 26-28% from 2005 levels by 2025.
Trump later rescinded or weakened the two main domestic policy efforts
initiated by Obama that would have helped Washington hit its Paris
targets: the Clean Power Plan (CPP) to cut emissions from the
electricity sector and national vehicle fuel efficiency targets aimed at
reducing the pollution and climate impact from cars and trucks. The
power and transport sectors make up the bulk of U.S. greenhouse gas
emissions, according to the Environmental Protection Agency.
The CPP, which had been tied up in litigation by Republican states since
it was launched, was replaced by the weaker Affordable Clean Energy rule
which had no hard targets for emissions cuts, while vehicle efficiency
targets were softened.
The Trump administration also altered the National Environmental Policy
Act governing environmental reviews of big infrastructure projects to
reduce the weight climate considerations can have in permitting.
A new administration could reverse course on these policies, and could
also quickly rejoin the Paris accords, as withdrawal will not be
complete until shortly after the Nov. 3 presidential election.
IMMIGRATION
An overhaul of the U.S. immigration system was a central plank of
Trump's 2016 election campaign. He tightened borders, reduced refugee
admissions and access to asylum, and instituted a sweeping ban that
mostly targeted travelers from majority-Muslim and African nations. He
imposed bureaucratic hurdles to curb legal immigration.
Trump used tough diplomacy to pressure Mexico and Central American
countries to make it more difficult for migrants to travel north to the
United States and, in one widely condemned move, separated parents from
their children at the southwest border. While he eventually reversed
this so-called "zero tolerance" policy, some separations continued and
some parents of separated children have not been located. Under a later
policy, almost all migrants seeking refuge at the U.S. border were
denied entry and forced to wait in Mexico, pending the outcome of asylum
applications that could take months or years.
He diverted billions of dollars in military funds to pay for a wall on
the southern border that he had vowed during his campaign to have Mexico
pay for. Nearly four years on, the wall remains incomplete.
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President Donald Trump makes a fist as he walks after speaking in a
campaign rally at Laughlin/Bullhead International Airport in
Bullhead City, Arizona, U.S., October 28, 2020. REUTERS/Jonathan
Ernst
TRADE
Trump promised to bring jobs back to the United States and shrink
the trade deficit with other countries, particularly China, by
introducing new taxes and other hurdles on imports, including steel
and Chinese-made industrial components, and by challenging
multilateral alliances and World Trade Organization rules. On his
third day in office in 2017, Trump quit the Trans-Pacific
Partnership, a 12-country Pacific Rim trade deal negotiated under
Obama.
His “America First” trade policies sparked a tit-for-tat tariff war
with China that left American companies and consumers paying sharply
higher duties on about $370 billion in annual Chinese imports, while
U.S. farmers and other exporters watched sales to China crumble.
Tensions eased with a "Phase 1" trade deal signed in January, but
Chinese companies have fallen far short of their commitments to
boost U.S. goods purchases under the deal, and no "Phase 2" has
materialized.
Trump’s administration re-negotiated the 1994 North American Free
Trade Agreement, which he blamed for the loss of millions of
manufacturing jobs to Mexico, adding digital trade rules and
stronger environmental and labor standards – the latter at the
insistence of Democrats.
U.S. government subsidies to make up lost income for farmers now
make up one-third of their income. The trade deficit jumped to its
highest level in 14 years in August.
TAX CUTS
The Tax Cuts and Jobs Act, signed by Trump in December 2017, was the
most significant restructuring of the U.S. tax system since the
1980s.
It slashed the rate companies pay in the United States from 35% to
21%, cut minimum, estate and gift taxes for the very wealthy and
eliminated some deductions for homeowners, especially in high-tax
Democratic states. It also lowered federal income tax rates for
individuals and raised the standard deduction, provisions that
expire after 2025.
The $1.5 trillion tax cut prompted U.S. corporations to bring home
billions of dollars in cash from abroad. Many boosted stock buybacks
instead of increasing capital investment or hiring, however,
sparking criticism from Trump.
Even before the federal government spent trillions on fiscal
stimulus to counter the impact of the coronavirus this year, the
U.S. deficit was expected to swell to over $1 trillion in 2020, in
part because of lower tax revenues after the reform, despite
Republican promises that the cuts would “pay for themselves” through
higher economic growth.
If elected, Biden has pledged to raise the corporate tax rate to
28%, and raise taxes on Americans earning over $400,000.
FOREIGN POLICY
Trump has upended some basic tenets of America’s post-World War Two
foreign policy by questioning the NATO alliance, alienating European
allies and indulging autocrats.
His disdain for multilateralism prompted a series of withdrawals
from accords and bodies where the United States had played a leading
role, including the Iran nuclear deal, the World Health Organization
and the U.N. Human Rights Council, as well as the Paris climate
accord.
The relationship with China deteriorated to levels not seen in
decades, raising fears of a new Cold War, especially after
Washington accused Beijing of hiding the coronavirus threat from the
world. The administration has ended the special status of Hong Kong,
sanctioned top officials on human rights abuses and seeks to ban
Chinese technology companies.
Trump delivered on his 2016 campaign promise to relocate the U.S.
Embassy in Israel to divided Jerusalem. Late in his term, his
administration also helped broker historic deals between Israel and
the United Arab Emirates, Bahrain and Sudan to normalize relations,
which even Trump’s critics applauded.
His hard line on Iran has had less success. The administration’s
“maximum pressure” campaign has put sanctions on everything from oil
revenue to minerals and Iran’s central bank, but has not forced a
change of behavior by Tehran or brought it back to negotiations on
the nuclear deal that Trump quit in 2018. Instead, tensions continue
to escalate.
Trump partially delivered on a campaign promise to bring troops home
from “endless wars,” particularly in Afghanistan where numbers are
dropping to the low thousands. But his relationship with military
top brass soured as the generals’ advice ran against his wishes,
including his order for an abrupt pullout from Syria.
Despite Trump's historic engagement with North Korean leader Kim
Jong Un, he has made no progress in persuading Kim to give up his
nuclear weapons.
(Reporting by Lawrence Hurley, David Lawder, Richard Valdmanis, Ross
Colvin, Mary Milliken and Heather Timmons; Editing by Sonya
Hepinstall and Howard Goller)
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