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Trump’s 100-Day Failures

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Paris (Imran Y. CHOUDHRY) :- Former Press Secretary to the President, Former Press Minister to the Embassy of Pakistan to France, Former MD, SRBC Mr. Qamar Bashir analysis : On the 100th day of his second term, President Donald J. Trump delivered a defiant and self-congratulatory Oval Office interview. Yet beneath the polished setting and forceful rhetoric, the exchange revealed glaring contradictions, unfulfilled promises, and deepening public unease. Trump, ever the political showman, projected strength—but his words betrayed a leadership style increasingly detached from facts, norms, and national priorities.
President Trump claimed that under his leadership, the U.S. economy was “booming,” citing Apple’s $500 million investment and $7 to $8 trillion in foreign investments within just two months. However, these boasts lacked corroboration and overlooked the damage caused by his aggressive tariff policies. Trump touted a 145% tariff on Chinese goods, likening it to an “embargo,” and insisted that “China will eat the tariffs.” But analysts disagree. Moody’s and multiple economic think tanks estimate that these tariffs could cost American households thousands annually.
Instead of lowering inflation as promised, Trump’s protectionist measures have worsened supply chain costs and raised prices for consumer goods like clothing, electronics, and housing materials. Yet Trump dis missed these concerns, saying, “Everything’s going to be just fine,” and shifted blame entirely to his predecessor, Joe Biden. His assurance that “people did sign up for this” rings hollow as working-class families and small businesses bear the brunt of his economic experiments.
Trump boasted of dramatic price reductions—like eggs being “down 87%” and gas prices hitting “$1.98”—without citing sources. These figures appear to be cherry-picked or unverified. Economists argue that his tariffs and abrupt economic policies have contributed more to instability than recovery. His promise to “bring prices down on day one” remains largely unmet, and when challenged with facts, Trump brushed them aside with: “You don’t know that.”
Trump’s trade war rhetoric ignored the plight of small businesses that rely on affordable imports. These businesses, once thriving on a global supply model, now face extinction due to rising costs. When pressed about their concerns, Trump doubled down: “I could’ve had an easy time, but then the country would have imploded.”
Despite his claim that the trade deficit has shrunk rapidly, he offered no supporting data. Nor did he acknowledge how tariffs have disrupted long-term commercial planning and manufacturing. His handling of the economy continues to prioritize short-term populist applause over sustainable economic strategy.
On immigration, Trump claimed illegal crossings had “plummeted 99.9%.” He painted a picture of a country overrun by criminals, asserting that 21 million undocumented people had entered the U.S. Again, no data was provided to support this number.
When asked if deportees were given legal hearings, Trump vacillated. He questioned the feasibility of 21 million hearings, brushing aside due process rights guaranteed under U.S. law. His administration even deported Kilmar Brego Garcia—a Salvadoran man under legal protection—prompting a Supreme Court ruling to return him. Trump dismissed the judgment as a mistake by an “incompetent” judge and refused to commit to complying with the order.
He further defended mass deportations to El Salvador despite many deportees lacking criminal records. When reminded of Joe Rogan’s criticism—that the U.S. risks becoming monstrous while fighting monsters—Trump nodded but quickly returned to his narrative of criminal invasions. Due process, to him, seems secondary to political theater.
Trump referred to the war in Ukraine as “Biden’s war,” repeatedly claiming that it would never have happened under his watch. He described a symbolic meeting with President Zelensky at Saint Peter’s Basilica, suggesting it offered hope. Yet in the same breath, he speculated that Putin “might be tapping me along,” contradicting his earlier assertion that Putin wanted peace.
He refused to confirm whether the U.S. would continue military aid to Ukraine, calling it “a big fat secret.” This ambiguity risks U.S. credibility and complicates alliance diplomacy. Asked whether he trusts Putin, Trump deflected: “I don’t trust a lot of people. I don’t trust you.” His praise of Putin’s respect for him raises further doubts about Trump’s geopolitical judgment.
Trump was also asked about Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth, who was under scrutiny for discussing classified operations on Signal. Trump described him as “smart” and “highly educated,” but when asked if he had full confidence in him, replied, “I don’t have 100% confidence in anything.” This hedging adds to growing concerns about the competence and cohesion of Trump’s second-term cabinet.
He continued to defend DOGE (Department of Government Efficiency), which has cut billions in what Trump calls wasteful spending. Yet these cuts affected critical institutions such as the NIH, global health programs, and foreign aid. Trump celebrated saving $150 billion but ignored the humanitarian and research setbacks. He even admitted that some programs might be reinstated due to oversight.
One of the most troubling aspects of Trump’s first 100 days is his use of presidential power for apparent personal retribution. He revoked security clearances and targeted law firms that represented his political opponents. He openly admitted that these firms “paid hundreds of millions” to avoid his wrath and declared, “They just signed whatever I put in front of them.”
When asked whether this behavior resembled authoritarianism, Trump deflected by framing himself as the victim. “There has never been a president persecuted like I was,” he insisted. He justified his actions by portraying others as “crooked” and “dishonest,” refusing to recognize any overreach on his part.
Trump’s offhand remarks about Canada becoming the 51st U.S. state during a Canadian election stirred backlash. When asked if this harmed America’s global reputation, he countered, “We’re respected again.” He mocked President Biden’s physical stumbles and doubled down on claims of a stolen 2020 election, further eroding faith in democratic norms.
He dismissed concerns about growing executive power, saying, “I’m making America great again,” and suggested that his return was a national resurgence. Yet this self-narrative—built on grievance, inflated claims, and unchecked power—has done little to heal the institutional and civic wounds of the last four years.
Trump’s 100-day report card is less a record of accomplishment and more a litany of distortions, deflections, and power plays. His reliance on anecdotal victories, exaggerated claims, and loyalty tests reflect an administration prioritizing optics over outcomes. While Trump insists he’s fixing what was broken, his approach is breaking the very mechanisms of law, diplomacy, and accountability that sustain democratic governance.
Rather than restoring greatness, Trump’s early second-term agenda has exposed the fragility of the nation’s institutions under his grip. His promises remain largely unfulfilled, his economic strategies deeply polarizing, and his leadership style increasingly authoritarian. For a nation yearning for progress, these 100 days have offered little more than déjà vu laced with danger.

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Trump rolls back tariffs on dozens of food products

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US President Donald Trump has signed an executive order allowing a range of food products, including coffee, bananas and beef, to escape his sweeping tariffs.

The move comes as his administration faces mounting pressure over rising prices. While Trump previously downplayed concerns about the cost of living, he has focused on the issue since his Republican Party’s poor performance in last week’s elections.

The dozens of products included on the White House’s list of exemptions range from avocados and tomatoes to coconuts and mangoes.

These goods, the Trump administration said on Friday, cannot be produced in sufficient quantities domestically.

Trump has long said that his tariffs – currently a baseline 10% on imports from all countries, with additional levies on many trading partners – would not lead to increased prices for US consumers. He also said affordability was a “new word” and a “con job” by Democrats.

He has argued the taxes are necessary to reduce the US trade deficit – the gap between the value of goods it buys from other countries and those it sells to them. Trump has said the US has been exploited by “cheaters” and “pillaged” by foreigners, adding that higher levies would encourage those in the US to buy American goods instead.

But grocery costs and the soaring price of beef has become a political issue for Trump. Last week, he called for an investigation into the meat-packing industry, accusing companies of “Illicit Collusion, Price Fixing, and Price Manipulation”.

He has aimed to rally support for the taxes, offering $2,000 tariff rebate cheques to Americans – even as the US Supreme Court is currently weighing whether Trump had the legal authority to implement them.

But the latest exemptions signal a reversal by the Trump administration, as the White House seeks to lower prices by walking back levies on some food staples.

Speaking to reporters on Friday, Trump said the decision will affect products that are not produced in the US, “so there’s no protection of our industries, or our food products”.

He added that he doesn’t think more policy rollbacks will be required in the future, saying “I don’t think it’ll be necessary.”

“We just did a little bit of a rollback on some foods, like coffee as an example, where the prices of coffee were a little bit high. Now they’ll be on the low side in a very short period of time,” Trump said.

Economists have warned that companies would pass the cost of tariffs onto their customers in the form of higher prices.

While inflation remained milder than many analysts had expected in September, most items tracked in the Department of Labor inflation report showed price increases, with groceries up 2.7% from last year.

The Trump administration’s new tariff exemptions for food products take effect retroactively at midnight on Thursday 13 November, the White House said.

In another move to address concerns among consumers about grocery prices, the Trump administration said import taxes on coffee and bananas will be lowered as part of trade deals with four Latin American countries.

This week, Trump and Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent both vowed to decrease coffee prices by 20% in the US this year.

What items are no longer subject to tariffs?

The White House released a list that includes more than 100 products no longer subject to the levies. Some of them include:

  • Coffee
  • Cocoa
  • Black tea
  • Green tea
  • Vanilla beans
  • Beef products, including high-quality cuts, bone-in and boneless cuts, corned beef, some frozen items, as well as salted, brined, dried or smoked meat
  • Fruits, including acai, avocadoes, bananas, coconuts, guavas, limes, oranges, mangoes, plantains, pineapples, various peppers and tomatoes
  • Spices, including allspice, bay leaves, cardamom, cinnamon, cloves, coriander seeds, cumin seeds, curry, dill fennel seeds, ginger, mace, nutmeg, oregano, paprika, saffron and turmeric
  • Nuts, grains, roots and seeds, such as barley, Brazil nuts, capers, cashews, chestnuts, macadamia nuts, miso, palm hearts, pine nuts, poppy seeds, tapioca, taro and water chestnuts

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Trump’s Empty Seat at COP30 Signals a Global Turning Point

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Paris (Imran Y. CHOUDHRY) :- Former Press Secretary to the President, Former Press Minister to the Embassy of Pakistan to France, Former MD, SRBC Mr. Qamar Bashir analysis : The absence of President Donald Trump from the COP30 Climate Summit, held from November 6–17, 2025 in Belém, Brazil, was more than a diplomatic misstep; it was a disgraceful abandonment of global responsibility. This was openly acknowledged by Democratic leaders in Washington, who described the empty American chair as “a historic humiliation for the United States.” At a press conference held on the same day the summit opened, leaders lamented that America had “vacated its seat at the head table,” leaving the world’s most important climate forum without the presence of the leader of the world’s largest historical emitter. Trump’s decision to abstain, and to send only a symbolic understaffed delegation, reflected not merely neglect but a deeper, dangerous rejection of science, consensus, and global leadership.
This matters even more because the 2025 COP30 summit is one of the most consequential climate gatherings since the Paris Agreement, attended by a constellation of world leaders who are shaping humanity’s environmental future. The summit was inaugurated by Brazil’s President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, joined by UN Secretary-General António Guterres, Chinese President Xi Jinping, French President Emmanuel Macron, German Chancellor Olaf Scholz, UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer, Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen, and leaders of almost every major African, Asian, and Latin American nation. Their presence underscored the urgency of the moment. The only notable absentee was Donald Trump.
Trump’s worldview on climate change remains skewed, unscientific, and rooted in denial. He has repeatedly dismissed climate science as “nonsense,” called global warming a “hoax,” and ridiculed decades of research produced by NASA, NOAA, the IPCC, and America’s own Department of Defense. His administration has reversed environmental regulations faster than any in modern history, rolling back more than 125 climate and pollution safeguards, reopening federal lands for oil and gas drilling, dismantling the Clean Power Plan, slashing environmental budgets, and restricting renewable energy incentives. The result is a United States stepping backward while the rest of the world steps forward.
His absence is especially alarming because the climate crisis is intensifying far faster than predictions. The world is now 1.3°C warmer than pre-industrial levels. Sea levels are rising at 4.5 millimeters per year, twice the pace of the 1990s. Extreme weather killed more than 60,000 people in 2024, with devastating storms, heatwaves, wildfires, and catastrophic floods striking every continent. Cities like Miami, New Orleans, Jakarta, and Lagos face annual flooding. Air pollution kills 7 million people annually, according to WHO. And the ozone layer, though recovering, is still vulnerable due to rising emissions of unregulated industrial chemicals.
Yet Trump chose to skip COP30 at the very moment when world leaders were committing unprecedented political and financial capital to reverse global warming. Nearly 190 countries reaffirmed climate change as “an existential threat to humanity,” agreeing to accelerate decarbonization, build climate-resilient infrastructure, and expand climate financing. China, which Trump falsely accuses of “polluting the world,” arrived with the strongest national plan: expanding renewable capacity to 5,000 gigawatts by 2030, investing $900 billion in green technologies, and pledging a national carbon peak before 2030 and neutrality by 2060. Ironically, the very nation he blames is now leading the world.
Europe also demonstrated unprecedented unity. The European Union declared climate change “the defining security challenge of the 21st century” and reaffirmed its €1 trillion Green Deal roadmap. Germany committed to shutting all remaining coal plants by 2030. France announced a massive nuclear and solar expansion. The UK pledged rapid EV adoption, banning new combustion engines by 2032. Canada committed billions to green hydrogen and Arctic protection. The contrast is stark: the world sees climate change as a war for human survival; the United States, under Trump, is withdrawing from the battlefield.
America’s withdrawal is part of a broader trend: the retreat of U.S. leadership across global institutions. The same pattern has occurred at the WHO, UNESCO, UNHRC, and WTO, where American influence has diminished due to policies seen as negative, confrontational, or aligned with narrow private interests instead of global well-being. Washington is increasingly outvoted, sidelined, or isolated—not because America lacks power, but because it has chosen to apply that power in ways that contradict scientific consensus and international expectations.
Trump continues to push policies that drag America further backward. He reopened federal financing for coal plants, issued more than 2,500 new oil and gas permits, expanded offshore drilling, and encouraged combustion-engine production while discouraging electric vehicles. He weakened fuel-efficiency standards, cut EV tax credits, and raised tariffs on imported electric cars. While China will sell over 11 million EVs in 2025, the United States faces stagnation due to inconsistent policy.
Meanwhile, renewable energy has become the cheapest electricity source in history: solar costs have fallen 89% in a decade, and wind by 70%. The world now installs 400 gigawatts of solar power annually, more than all U.S. coal capacity combined. Within a decade, fossil fuels will be economically obsolete. If America delays any longer, it will re-enter the clean energy race as a beginner—untrained, unprepared, and uncompetitive.
Inside the United States, powerful voices are rising in protest. Scientists, environmental organizations, governors, mayors, universities, and corporate leaders have condemned the administration’s retreat. California, New York, Michigan, Illinois, and more than 200 American cities reaffirmed their commitment to the Paris Agreement. At COP30, multiple senators openly declared that Trump’s absence “damages U.S. credibility and weakens national security.” Photos of the empty U.S. seat in the main plenary hall went viral worldwide, symbolizing a superpower turning its back on humanity.
America once led the world in environmental policy. It shaped the Paris Agreement, built climate finance structures, and pushed global emissions reduction. That legacy is being dismantled. Trump’s policies not only endanger the U.S. but threaten global stability. A superpower that once led from the front is now missing at the moment of greatest need.
The United States must rethink its direction before it is too late. It must return to clean energy innovation, rebuild institutional capacity, train its workforce for the green economy, and reclaim its leadership at COP and across all UN bodies. Leadership lost today will not be easily regained. The world is moving forward at high speed, and America cannot afford to be left behind again.

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Trump celebrates as Democrats face fallout from end of shutdown

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After 43 days, the longest US government shutdown in history is coming to an end.

Federal workers will start receiving pay again. National Parks will reopen. Government services that had been curtailed or suspended entirely will resume. Air travel, which had become a nightmare for many Americans, will return to being merely frustrating.

After the dust settles and the ink from President Donald Trump’s signature on the funding bill dries, what has this record-setting shutdown accomplished? And what has it cost?

Senate Democrats, through their use of the parliamentary filibuster, were able to trigger the shutdown despite being a minority in the chamber by refusing to go along with a Republican measure to temporarily fund the government.

They drew a line in the sand, demanding that the Republicans agree to extend health insurance subsidies for low-income Americans that are set to expire at the end of the year.

When a handful of Democrats broke ranks to vote to reopen the government on Sunday, they received next to nothing in return – a promise of a vote in the Senate on the subsidies, but no guarantees of Republican support or even a necessary vote in the House of Representatives.

Since then, members of the party’s left flank have been furious.

They’ve accused Senate Democratic leader Chuck Schumer – who didn’t vote for the funding bill – of being secretly complicit in the reopening plan or simply incompetent. They’ve felt like their party folded even after off-year election success showed they had the upper hand. They feared that the shutdown sacrifices had been for nothing.

Even more mainstream Democrats, like California’s Governor Gavin Newsom, called the shutdown deal “pathetic” and a “surrender”.

“I’m not coming in to punch anybody in the face,” he told the Associated Press, “but I’m not pleased that, in the face of this invasive species that is Donald Trump, who’s completely changed the rules of the game, that we’re still playing by the old rules of the game.”

Newsom has 2028 presidential ambitions and can be a good barometer for the mood of the party. He was a loyal supporter of Joe Biden who turned out to defend the then-president even after his disastrous June debate performance against Trump.

If he is running for the pitchforks, it’s not a good sign for Democratic leaders.

For Trump, in the days since the Senate deadlock broke on Sunday, his mood has gone from cautious optimism to celebration.

On Tuesday, he congratulated congressional Republicans and called the vote to reopen the government “a very big victory”.

“We’re opening up our country,” he said at a Veteran’s Day commemoration at Arlington Cemetery. “It should have never been closed.”

Trump, perhaps sensing the Democratic anger toward Schumer, joined the pile-on during a Fox News interview on Monday night.

“He thought he could break the Republican Party, and the Republicans broke him,” Trump said of the Senate Democrat.

Although there were times when Trump appeared to be buckling – last week he berated Senate Republicans for refusing to scrap the filibuster to reopen the government – he ultimately emerged from the shutdown having made little in the way of substantive concessions.

While his poll numbers have declined over the last 40 days, there’s still a year before Republicans have to face voters in the midterms. And, barring some kind of constitutional rewrite, Trump never has to worry about standing for election again.

With the end of the shutdown, Congress will get back to its regularly scheduled programming. Although the House of Representatives has effectively been on ice for more than a month, Republicans still hope they can pass some substantive legislation before next year’s election cycle kicks in.

While several government departments will be funded until September in the shutdown-ending agreement, Congress will have to approve spending for the rest of the government by the end of January to avoid another shutdown.

Democrats, licking their wounds, may be hankering for another chance to fight.

Meanwhile, the issue they fought over – healthcare subsidies – could become a pressing concern for tens of millions of Americans who will see their insurance costs double or triple at the end of the year. Republicans ignore addressing such voter pain at their own political peril.

And that isn’t the only peril facing Trump and the Republicans. A day that was supposed to be highlighted by the House government-funding vote was spent dwelling on the latest revelations surrounding the late convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.

Later on Wednesday, Congresswoman Adelita Grijalva was sworn in to her congressional seat and became the 218th and final signatory on a petition that will force the House of Representatives to hold a vote ordering the justice department to release all its files on the Epstein case.

It was enough to prompt Trump to complain, on his Truth Social website, that his government-funding success was being eclipsed.

“The Democrats are trying to bring up the Jeffrey Epstein Hoax again because they’ll do anything at all to deflect on how badly they’ve done on the Shutdown, and so many other subjects,” he wrote.

It was all a very clear reminder that the best-laid plans and political strategies can be derailed in a flash.

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