By:
Dr Hemlock
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President Trump receives non-stop criticism in the press. I
agree that criticism is necessary when a president makes mistakes, but where
are the voices expressing appreciation for the good things Trump has done? It’s
unfair to always criticize and never recognize any of the good things a
president has done.
It might be a refreshing change to recall some of the
remarkable, nation-changing good things that Trump has accomplished for
America. Here is my personal list.
Because of space limitations, I have not given extensive
arguments explaining why I think these actions are good for the United States.
But more extensive arguments can be found in my books Christian Ethics, Politics
According to the Bible, and The Poverty of Nations.
Trump has appointed two
Supreme Court justices, 53 federal appellate judges, and 146
District Court judges (as well as two judges for the Court
of International Trade) who have been confirmed by the Senate so far. In
addition, 64 more have been appointed and are awaiting Senate confirmation.
All of them are committed to interpreting the Constitution and laws according
to the original meaning of the words, rather than according to what a modern
liberal judge thinks the law should have said.
As an evangelical Christian, I am glad to see that Trump’s
two Supreme Court appointments have already been responsible for highly
significant cases that increase religious freedom, such as the decisions (1) to
allow state aid that is given to non-religious schools to be given also to
religious schools (Montana
decision); (2) to protect the right of
religious schools to hire and fire employees based on the school’s religious
convictions; and (3) to allow religious
groups to be exempt from government regulations that would otherwise cause them
to violate their consciences in matters of birth control (and, by implication,
probably in matters of abortion and same-sex marriage, but that has not yet
been tested).
After
eight years of high unemployment and meager growth under President Obama’s
administration, the Trump tax cuts of 2017 and Trump’s extensive canceling of
excessive government regulations on businesses have given a tremendous boost to
the American economy. An estimated 25,000 pages
of regulations have been canceled, resulting in a savings of $3,100 per
household per year. Another result of tax cuts combined with deregulation has
been the addition of thousands of new jobs, so that unemployment (before the
coronavirus crisis) fell to the lowest
point in 50 years, and unemployment among African-American and
Hispanic workers was the lowest it
has ever been in history.
On election day, 2016 (11-8-16), the Dow Jones Industrial
Average closed at 18,332.74.
This afternoon (8-21-20 at 2:29 p.m.) it stands at 27,
898.82, which is an increase of 52% in 3.5 years, even including several months
of the coronavirus epidemic. This is remarkable.
These economic changes affect ordinary people’s everyday
lives, not just wealthy people. Tens of thousands of people who were unemployed
have recovered the dignity of steady employment (including getting paid during
the coronavirus crisis). Millions of ordinary Americans whose retirement
savings are partially invested in the stock market (including my wife and me)
are finally receiving some protection and even growth in their savings.
Reversing
the massive budget cuts that had seriously weakened our military under the
Obama administration, President Trump has increased military spending by nearly
$150 billion per year from $605 billion in 2016 to $750
billion, steadily rebuilding U.S. military readiness.
Numerous executive
orders have increasingly
restricted government funding for abortions (such as the reinstatement
of the Mexico City policy). On February 22, 2019, the Trump
administration announced that
it would not allow organizations that provide referrals for abortions to receive
federal family-planning money, which implies a cut in funding for Planned
Parenthood (the nation’s largest abortion provider) unless they perform
abortions in a separate facility and not refer patients to it. And on May 2,
2019, the Trump administration’s Department of Health and Human Services issued a
new rule protecting healthcare workers who decline on the basis of conscience
or religious conviction to participate in procedures such as abortion or
assisted suicide. Trump was the first president ever to personally attend the
pro-life March for Life in Washington, D.C. on January 24, 2020.
President
Trump appointed Betsy DeVos, one of America’s leading advocates for greater
school choice, to be Secretary of Education, resulting in rising
support for charter schools, taxpayer-funded vouchers, and tax credits
for private-school vouchers, programs aimed at expanding options for parents
looking beyond traditional public schools as she brings attention to them.
Reversing President
Obama’s repeated marginalization and shunning of Israel, President Trump has
reaffirmed our commitment to support and defend Israel. He decisively moved the
United States Embassy from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem.
He recognized the Golan
Heights as part of Israel. He has welcomed Prime Minister Benjamin
Netanyahu to the White House several times and has repeatedly reaffirmed our
support for Israel. I recently read in the Jerusalem
Post a statement that Israel has never had a better friend in the
White House than Donald Trump.
On August 13, 2020, President Trump announced
that Israel and the United Arab Emirates (UAE) had come to a historic agreement to
establish full diplomatic relations between the two countries, including the
establishment of permanent embassies and the beginning of direct airline
flights between the two countries. This is important because Dubai, the largest
city in the UAE, is the leading financial center in the Middle East and plays a
paramount role in world air travel and tourism. The agreement will
“strengthen regional checks on Iranian power.” It also has the potential to set
a pattern for future agreements establishing
peaceful relations between Israel and other Arab countries in the Middle East.
President
Trump has relentlessly battled against Democratic stonewalling and liberal
federal judges to build an effective, secure border
wall along more than 200
miles of our southern border, and it could possibly reach as much as
450 miles by the end of 2020. Critics object that most of this construction is
simply replacing old barriers that were already in place, but they fail to
recognize that the government’s first priority has been to secure the highest
traffic areas, and in many of those areas the old fence was not up to the job.
An effective border wall is absolutely necessary to keep our nation secure and
to gain some control over an immigration crisis that has spiraled out of
control. It won’t put an end to all illegal immigration, but eventually it will
likely stop over 95 percent of people who try to enter on foot.
This is important because once the American people feel that
the border is secure, it will be much easier to gain the political consensus
necessary for a humane and just solution regarding the undocumented immigrants
who are already here, and for widespread support for the legal entry
of large numbers of immigrants who will contribute much value to this great
nation.
President
Trump has proposed and worked for sensible, comprehensive reform of our broken
immigration system that would change our policy on legal immigration
from a system based on extended family connections and randomness to a system
based on merit, so that we prioritize admitting people who will be most likely
to contribute positively to American society (as well as those who are escaping
from genuine threats to their lives in their homelands).
President
Trump’s administration has repeatedly and continually worked to defend
religious freedom, and his Justice Department has defended religious freedom in
numerous court cases, such as supporting the case of Colorado cake
designer Jack
Phillips at the Supreme Court (Phillips faced massive fines for
politely declining to design a cake celebrating a same-sex wedding), and
the right
of faith-based organizations not to be required to provide access to
abortifacients through their health care plans, overturning the Obamacare HHS
regulation that had forced them to do so.
In addition, in the first year of Trump’s presidency, the
Department of Justice issued a strongly-worded, 25-page memorandum detailing
exceptionally strong protections for religious liberty.
President
Trump wisely and decisively removed the United States from the Paris climate
accord, a radical environmentalist program which, according to a Heritage
Foundation study, would have brought
massive increases to U.S. energy prices with no statistically significant
benefit to the environment. Doubling or tripling of U.S. energy costs (as under
the Paris climate accord, according to the Heritage Foundation) would have
harmed the poor most of all as they spend the highest portion of their budgets
on energy. In addition, it would have cost America
more than 206,000 jobs by 2040.
President Trump gave approval to
the Keystone pipeline, the Dakota access pipeline, and oil
production from the Alaska National Wildlife Refuge, a vast
uninhabited region that could produce up
to 20 percent of our petroleum needs. His administration has also granted
more permits for
mining of oil, gas, and coal from federal lands.The result has been lower
energy prices (which benefits everyone) and also U.S. energy independence so
that we are now becoming the
leading exporter rather than a net importer of energy.
The Trump
administration’s decision to abandon the “waterways of the U.S.” policy rightfully
returned control of water on private lands to the owners of those
lands, rather than the federal government seizing control over nearly all
waterways in the United States. These rules have hindered farmers,
ranchers, and developers. American Farm Bureau Chairman Zippy Duvall praised the
action, saying: “Farmers and ranchers care about clean water and preserving the
land, which are essential to producing healthy food and fiber and ensuring
future generations can do the same. That’s why we support the new clean water
rule. It provides clarity and certainty, allowing farmers to understand water
regulations without having to hire teams of consultants and lawyers. We
appreciate the commitment of the agencies involved and this administration to
crafting a new regulation that achieves important regulatory oversight while
allowing farmers to farm. Clean water, clear rules.”
The Trump administration decision halted the
Obama-imposed harsh annual increases in projected
average miles per gallon required in new cars every year. This
decision will lead to more consumer choice and less expensive and safer cars,
which is much better than the Democratic policy of ever-higher mileage goals,
requiring ever-lighter and smaller cars, which means more dangerous cars and
less consumer choice.
President Trump gave our
military forces the freedom to defeat
ISIS and drive them out of large sections of Iraq and Syria, which
they did. This is far superior to the Democratic policy of inaction and
appeasement, which had allowed ISIS to take over large areas of the Middle
East. Under President Trump’s leadership, U.S. military forces located
and killed ISIS
founder and terrorist leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi on Oct. 26-27, 2019.
President Trump also directed the killing of
Iranian terrorist mastermind Qasem Soleimani on Jan. 2, 2020.
President Trump has insisted that NATO countries start to pay their fair share
of defense costs, and some NATO countries have responded by increasing their
defense budgets. In 2017, five countries met the goal of spending 2 percent of
their GDP on defense and that has now increased to nine, according to the
alliance's latest budgetary data. The U.S. is set to spend over $750
billion (3.7 percent of GDP) on its military this year and leads the
“above 2%” group, which now includes Bulgaria (3.25 percent), Greece (2.28
percent), the United Kingdom (2.14 percent), Estonia (2.14 percent), Romania
(2.04 percent), Lithuania (2.03 percent), Latvia (2.01 percent) and Poland (2
percent).
President
Trump’s administration has restored many
due process guidelines that universities must follow in processing title IX
accusations of sexual assault on university campuses.
President
Trump issued an
executive order giving more specific protections to freedom of speech on
college campuses by threatening the loss of federal research dollars if they do
not allow for free speech for all students and faculty members. On many
campuses, conservative and religious students and faculty members have had
their views censored or
have faced retribution for expressing conservative or faith-based views.
On February 22, 2017, President Trump directed the
Department of Education to revoke the Obama administration’s guidance letter
that had directed schools to allow children who claim to be “transgender” to
use the bathrooms, locker rooms, and showers of their choice, and to join sports
teams of their choice, even when their choices differed from their biological
sex.
In a related decision, President Trump issued an executive
order banning transgender persons from entering our military forces, which
would have allowed biological males free access to women’s bathrooms, locker
rooms and showers, and similarly allowed biological females to enter men’s
facilities. Present Trump’s order was upheld by
the Supreme Court, which lifted the block on the order by a 5-4 vote. While
litigation will continue, the order
stands for now.
President Trump has negotiated new
trade agreements with Mexico,
Canada, and China,
and all of them give more favorable treatment to the United States than the previous
treaties did.
In order to
build a new section of highway, a new subway line, or a new gas pipeline, the
necessary environmental impact statements have recently taken an
average of 4.5 years, and many ran for six years or longer. These delays
massively increased construction costs and delayed relief for over-congested highways
for many years. But on July 15, 2020, President Trump’s White House released new
guidelines limiting environmental impact studies to two years and limiting
less-extensive environmental assessments to one year. The Wall Street
Journal says these
new rules “could literally cut thousands of years of cumulative delay” for
construction projects. This will be a huge help in renewing America’s aging
infrastructure.
Whereas President
Obama sent only humanitarian aid, President Trump authorized the
selling of actual military equipment to Ukraine, including Javelin missiles
that were necessary to defend against Russian aggression.
Trump has
been the first president to decisively denounce China’s
blatant practice of industrial espionage and bullying, stealing of intellectual
property, and violating international
copyright protections. He has followed
up with strong trade sanctions against China, an increased U.S.
naval presence in the South China Sea, and the closing of
the Chinese consulate in Houston, which was a center of Chinese espionage. The
Trump administration has
closed several Russian consulates in the U.S. and expelled over 60
Russian “diplomats” (espionage agents), issued sanctions against
several Russian officials, and persuaded several
European nations to increase their defenses against potential Russian invasion.
President
Trump withdrew the
U.S. from the Iran nuclear deal, called the Joint Comprehensive Plan for
Action, which would have allowed Iran to build a nuclear bomb within the next
few years.
President Trump imposed
strict restrictions on travel from China on January 31, 2020, long before other
leaders recognized the danger of this coronavirus. Then, when the COVID-19
virus began to spread rapidly within the United States, the dominant media
narrative was a fear that we would run out of hospital beds to care for the
sick. President Trump immediately mobilized the
military to construct huge new hospital facilities in New York City and
elsewhere, and soon there were enough beds. The next fear was that we would run
out of ventilators. President Trump persuaded leaders
of American industry to fast-track the manufacture of ventilators, and soon
there were enough ventilators. Then the question was how soon to reopen
buildings and meeting places, and President Trump wisely left the decision to
local governors and other local officials who best know the different
situations in their individual locations.
Finally, the FDA has fast-tracked the
trial and approval process for a vaccine, and the federal government has made
commitments to purchase millions of vaccines from various companies as soon as
they are approved for widespread use. Several promising vaccines are now in the
advanced stages of testing on human subjects. The previous record for rapid FDA
approval of a new vaccine was four
years from initial research to final approval, but under President
Trump’s leadership experts are now optimistically predicting that
an FDA-approved coronavirus vaccine will be available as early as October 2020,
which would be nine months from the time the outbreak of the coronavirus in
Wuhan, China became known.
In addition, President Trump, working with Congress, quickly
passed three coronavirus
relief packages, with the result that
millions of Americans continued to receive pay in spite of their workplaces
being temporarily closed.
Unfortunately, many Democrats have decided to make the
coronavirus tragedy a political issue, repeatedly criticizing President Trump’s
response. With the benefit of hindsight, Monday morning quarterbacks can always
claim they would have made better decisions in Sunday afternoon’s game, but
they didn’t have to make instant decisions in the midst of the contest.
We need to recognize that President Trump, in dealing with
the coronavirus crisis, has repeatedly had to make hard decisions in a situation
where he had incomplete information and conflicting advice from different
scientific, medical, economic, and educational experts. Others may disagree,
but it seems to me that in a very difficult situation he has done a commendable
job of balancing the need to protect Americans’ health, the need to avoid
destroying our economy, the need to protect businesses from bankruptcy, and the
need to get children back to school so that they will not be deprived of many
crucial months in their education.
On
June 23, 2017, President Trump signed the Veterans
Accountability and Whistleblower Protection Act, which gave the Secretary
of Veterans Affairs streamlined authority to fire unproductive employees and to
appoint new medical directors at VA hospitals. But even before that law, the
Trump administration had begun to clean house, and over 500 employees
were fired from
the Veterans Administration in the first six months of Trump’s presidency.
President Trump signed
the First
Step Act on December 21, 2018. This law gives judges more
flexibility in reducing mandatory sentencing guidelines in individual
cases, eliminates the “three strikes” requirement of life imprisonment for some
offenses, improves opportunities for academic and vocational education within
prisons, provides more support for the successful reentry of released prisoners
into society, and requires prisoners to be placed in prisons near their place
of primary residence where possible.
On July
24, 2020, President Trump signed four
executive orders aimed at reducing prescription drug prices. These included
requiring federal health centers to make insulin and epinephrine available at
massive discounts to low-income persons; prohibiting secret deals between drug
manufacturers and pharmacy “benefit manager” middlemen; ensuring patients
directly benefit from available discounts at the pharmacy counter; allowing
more importation of prescription drugs from Canada and other countries where
prices are lower; and reducing prices for Medicare Part B drugs if they are
available for lower prices in other economically advanced countries.
I personally doubt the wisdom of using price controls
instead of fostering greater competition to reduce drug prices, but I’m still
listing this as a good action because it may be a useful first step in
providing a signal that Republicans are serious about solving the real problem
of expensive drugs that many people cannot afford.
The
movement that began as peaceful and well-justified protests against the murder
of George Floyd was soon co-opted by the presence of lawless rioters whose goal
was destruction of property by looting and arson that began in Minneapolis and
soon spread to Seattle, Portland, Chicago, New York, and other cities. In
contrast to the weak Democratic mayors and governors who adopted a policy of
appeasement that only encouraged more violence and even resulted in the burning of
a police station in Minneapolis, President Trump announced in Washington, D.C.
that any destruction of federal statues and monuments would result in fines up
to $10,000, and suddenly the attacks on these statues came to an abrupt halt.
When rioters threatened to destroy the U.S. courthouse in Portland, and the
governor and the mayor were not protecting this federal property, President
Trump sent in federal officers to protect it, which they did. The courthouse
was not
destroyed and the slightly over 100 U.S. marshals and DHS officers
inside the building were protected until eventually the mayor of Portland sent local
and state police to protect the building.
According to the 1807 Insurrection Act, the president has
the legal
authority to take any measures (including deploying federal troops or
other law enforcement officials) necessary to suppress any insurrection,
domestic violence, unlawful combination or conspiracy, even without an
invitation or permission from the governor of the state in which that federal
property is located. An example of this happened in 1957 when President Dwight
Eisenhower sent federal troops into Arkansas over the objections of Governor
Orval Faubus to enforce federal school desegregation orders and protect
African-American schoolchildren from a mob that had gathered to stop them outside
Central High School in Little Rock.
In a further response to the violence threatening many of
our cities, President Trump’s Department of Justice has now launched Operation
Legend, in which over 1,000 additional federal agents have been dispatched to
work alongside local law enforcement officers in nine cities to apprehend the
most violent instigators of these riots. They have now located
and arrested 1485 suspects for violent crimes, including 90 homicides.
This may not be important to others, but, speaking as an
evangelical Christian, I see it as a positive factor that, rather than
marginalizing evangelical Christians (as was the practice of the Obama
administration), President Trump has appointed a remarkably large number of
evangelicals to high government offices. These include Vice President Mike
Pence, Ben Carson (Secretary of Housing and Urban Development), Betsy DeVos
(Secretary of Education), Rick Perry (former Secretary of Energy), Scott Pruitt
(former Administrator of the Environmental Protection Agency), Dan Coats (former
Director of National Intelligence), Mike Pompeo (Secretary of State), Russ
Vought (Director of Office of Management and Budget), and Kayleigh McEnany
(White House Press Secretary), and others.
In addition, he has frequently welcomed evangelical
pastors and other leaders to the White House, for both public and private
conversations.
The context: These 30 good actions have all been
accomplished in spite of a remarkably
hostile national media. The Media Research Center analyzed all the
evaluative statements made by reporters, anchors, and nonpartisan sources (such
as experts or voters but not people identified as Democrats or Republicans)
during June and July of 2020 on “World News Tonight “ (ABC), “Evening News”
(CBS), and “NBC Nightly News” (NBC). They counted 34 positive evaluative
statements made about President Trump and 634 negative statements during those
two months. By contrast, there were eight positive statements and four negative
evaluative statements about Biden during the same time period. (Biden had
become the presumptive Democratic nominee on April 8 when Bernie Sanders
suspended his campaign.)
These numbers indicate that, for every time that viewers
heard a negative evaluation of Biden, they heard 158 negative evaluations of
Trump. For every positive statement they heard about Trump, they heard 18
negative statements. This is not balanced reporting, nor is it responsible
journalism. Someone may object that the Media Research Center is a politically
conservative content analysis organization, but that does not invalidate their
tabulations, which I suspect would be consistent with the perceptions of any
viewers who watch these newscasts for a few days. A similar kind of bias could
also be seen on CNN or MSNBC.
Research director Rich Noyes at the Media Research Center
was quoted as saying, “I have been studying the news media and elections for
more than 35 years. Trust me – there has never been anything like it.” He
called this “the most biased presidential campaign coverage in modern media history.”
I point out this media bias in order to observe that
President Trump’s unwavering commitment to common-sense conservative political
policies is remarkable. Few human beings would have the courage and strength of
character to persist in the face of such overwhelmingly hostile mainstream news
coverage. And he has not done this while avoiding the press but has held 17 solo
press conferences and 44 joint press conferences in 3.5 years (as of July 20th)
plus numerous less formal interchanges with the press when he leaves or returns
to the White House by helicopter.
In addition, he has done all this while enduring 3.5 years
of “resistance” by a massive special counsel investigation (that came to
nothing), impeachment by the House (that came to nothing), and numerous
nationwide injunctions against his executive orders issued by individual U.S.
District Court judges. In this context, Trump’s resolute pursuit of the
policies on which he campaigned seems to me to be commendable.
Divine blessing or divine judgment? Speaking as
an evangelical Christian, I believe that God exercises providential control
over the history of nations. The Old Testament says, “The Most High rules the
kingdom of men and gives it to whom he will and sets over it the lowliest of
men” (Daniel 4:17). Similarly, the New Testament says, “Let every person be
subject to the governing authorities. For there is no authority except from
God, and those that exist have been instituted by God” (Romans 13:1).
But that doesn’t mean that all rulers are good. Sometimes
God gives a nation oppressive rulers as a means of divine judgment, as when he
led Nebuchadnezzar, King of Babylon, to carry off the Jewish people into exile
(2 Kings 24:10 - 25:21). At other times he gives leaders who will bring
blessing to a nation, as when God led Cyrus, king of Persia, to decree that the
Jewish people could return to their homeland (Ezra 1:1-4).
So here is a question for my fellow Christians: If you
believe (as I do) that God is sovereign over the affairs of nations, do you
think that Donald Trump’s presidency has been evidence of divine blessing or
divine judgment? I admit that perceiving divine purposes in human events is a
task that cannot be proved with certainty one way or another, but when I look
over this list of 30 actions, it appears to me to be far more characteristic of
divine blessing than of divine judgment. If others disagree, I respect your
right to have a different opinion, but that is my view.
Conclusion: If President Trump is reelected (as I
hope he will be), we can expect four more years of the same type of White House
activity: more originalist judges, ongoing lower taxes and deregulation,
continuing funding for a stronger military, further restrictions on abortion,
more school choice, continued support for Israel, hundreds of additional miles
of border wall, a humane and just solution to immigration, continuing protection
of religious freedom and freedom of conscience, abundant safe energy
production, continued protection against Islamic terrorism, a stronger NATO
alliance, more free speech protections on college campuses, continued
protection of separate boys and girls sports teams and locker rooms, more trade
agreements that are fair to the United States, accelerated renewal of our aging
infrastructure, unflinching resistance to Russian and Chinese aggressiveness,
continued isolation of Iran and multilateral containment of their hostile
expansionist ambitions, normalization of relations between Israel and other
Arab nations, and further solutions to the problem of high drug prices.
No doubt more beneficial actions could be added to this
list, but these should be enough to justify another four good years with Donald
Trump as president.
Wayne Grudem is Distinguished Research Professor of
Theology and Biblical Studies at Phoenix Seminary in Arizona. The views
expressed in this article represent the views of the author and should not be
understood to represent the position of Phoenix Seminary.
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