Donald Trump
It has been suggested that this article be split into a new article titled Political policies of Donald Trump. (discuss) (December 2024) |
Donald Trump | |
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President-elect of the United States | |
Assuming office January 20, 2025 | |
Vice President | JD Vance (elect) |
Succeeding | Joe Biden |
45th President of the United States | |
In office January 20, 2017 – January 20, 2021 | |
Vice President | Mike Pence |
Preceded by | Barack Obama |
Succeeded by | Joe Biden |
Personal details | |
Born | Donald John Trump June 14, 1946 Queens, New York City, U.S. |
Political party | Republican (1987–1999, 2009–2011, 2012–present) |
Other political affiliations |
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Spouses | |
Children | |
Parents |
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Relatives | Trump family |
Education | University of Pennsylvania (BS) |
Occupation | |
Awards | Full list |
Signature | |
Website | |
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Business and personal 45th & 47th President of the United States Tenure
Impeachments Civil and criminal prosecutions |
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Donald John Trump (born June 14, 1946) is an American politician, media personality, and businessman who served as the 45th president of the United States from 2017 to 2021. Having won the 2024 presidential election as the Republican nominee, he is scheduled to be inaugurated as the 47th president on January 20, 2025.
Trump graduated with a bachelor's degree in economics from the University of Pennsylvania in 1968. After becoming president of the family real estate business in 1971, he renamed it the Trump Organization and focused on luxury accommodation. After a series of bankruptcies in the 1990s he launched side ventures, mostly by licensing the Trump name. From 2004 to 2015, he produced and hosted the reality television series The Apprentice.
Trump won the 2016 presidential election as the Republican Party nominee. His election and policies sparked numerous protests. In his first term, he ordered a travel ban targeting Muslims and refugees, expanded the U.S.–Mexico border wall, and implemented a family separation policy at that border. He rolled back more than 100 environmental policies and regulations, signed the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act of 2017, and appointed three justices to the Supreme Court. He initiated a trade war with China in 2018, withdrew the U.S. from several international agreements,[a] and met with North Korean leader Kim Jong Un without progress on denuclearization. In response to the COVID-19 pandemic, he signed the CARES Act economic stimulus, downplayed the crisis's severity, and contradicted guidance from public health officials. He was impeached in 2019 for abuse of power and obstruction of Congress, and in 2021 for incitement of insurrection; the Senate acquitted him in both cases.
Trump's politics and rhetoric led to the Trumpism movement. Many of his comments and actions have been characterized as racially charged, racist, and misogynistic. He promoted conspiracy theories and made many false and misleading statements during his campaigns and presidency, to a degree unprecedented in American politics. After his first term, scholars and historians ranked him as one of the worst presidents in American history. He lost the 2020 presidential election, but did not concede, falsely claiming widespread electoral fraud and attempting to overturn the results, including his involvement in the January 6 Capitol attack. In 2024, he was found guilty of falsifying business records, making him the first U.S. president to be convicted of a felony. He faced more felony indictments related to his interference in the 2020 election and his handling of classified documents, which were dismissed after the 2024 election.
Early life and education
Trump was born on June 14, 1946, at Jamaica Hospital in Queens, New York City, the fourth child of Fred Trump and Mary Anne MacLeod Trump.[1] He is of German and Scottish descent.[2] He grew up with his older siblings, Maryanne, Fred Jr., and Elizabeth, and his younger brother, Robert, in a mansion in the Jamaica Estates neighborhood of Queens.[3]
Trump attended the private college-preparatory Kew-Forest School through seventh grade.[4] He was a difficult child and showed an early interest in his father's business.[5] His father enrolled him in New York Military Academy, a private boarding school, to complete secondary school;[6] he learned to excel in a strict regimen.[7]
In 1964, Trump enrolled at Fordham University. Two years later, he transferred to the Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania,[8] graduating in May 1968 with a Bachelor of Science in economics.[9] He was exempted from the draft during the Vietnam War due to bone spurs in his heels.[10] In 2015, he threatened his high school, colleges, and the College Board with legal action if they released his academic records.[11]
Personal life
Family
In 1977, Trump married the Czech model Ivana Zelníčková.[12] They had three children: Donald Jr. (1977–), Ivanka (1981–), and Eric (1984–). The couple divorced in 1990, following his affair with the actress Marla Maples.[13] He and Maples married in 1993 and divorced in 1999. They have one daughter, Tiffany (1993–), whom Maples raised in California.[14] In 2005, he married the Slovenian model Melania Knauss.[15] They have one son, Barron (2006–).[16]
Health
Trump says he has never drunk alcohol, smoked cigarettes, or used drugs.[17][18] He sleeps about four or five hours a night.[19][20] He has called golfing his "primary form of exercise", but usually does not walk the course.[21] He considers exercise a waste of energy because he believes the body is "like a battery, with a finite amount of energy", which is depleted by exercise.[22][23] In 2015, his campaign released a letter from his longtime personal physician, Harold Bornstein, stating that he would "be the healthiest individual ever elected to the presidency".[24] In 2018, Bornstein said Trump had dictated the contents of the letter and that three of Trump's agents had seized his medical records in a February 2017 raid on Bornstein's office.[24][25]
Views
Many of Trump's comments and actions have been described as racist.[26] In national polling, about half of respondents said that he is racist; a greater proportion believed that he emboldened racists.[27] Several studies and surveys found that racist attitudes fueled his political ascent and were more important than economic factors in determining the allegiance of Trump voters.[28] Racist and Islamophobic attitudes are a powerful indicator of support for Trump.[29] He has also been accused of racism for insisting a group of black and Latino teenagers were guilty of raping a white woman in the 1989 Central Park jogger case, even after they were exonerated in 2002 when the actual rapist confessed and his DNA matched the evidence. In October 2024, the men sued Trump for defamation after he said in a televised September debate that they had committed the crime and killed the woman.[30]
In 2011, when he was reportedly considering a presidential run, Trump became the leading proponent of the racist "birther" conspiracy theory, alleging that Barack Obama, the first black U.S. president, was not born in the U.S.[31] In April, he claimed credit for pressuring the White House to publish the "long-form" birth certificate, which he considered fraudulent, and later said this made him "very popular".[32] In September 2016, amid pressure, he acknowledged that Obama was born in the U.S.[33] In 2017, he reportedly expressed birther views privately.[34]
Trump has a history of belittling women when speaking to the media and on social media.[35][36] He made lewd comments, disparaged women's physical appearances, and referred to them using derogatory epithets.[36] At least 25 women publicly accused him of sexual misconduct, including rape, kissing without consent, groping, looking under women's skirts, and walking in on naked teenage pageant contestants. He has denied the allegations.[37] In October 2016, a 2005 "hot mic" recording surfaced in which Trump bragged about kissing and groping women without their consent, saying that "when you're a star, they let you do it. You can do anything. ... Grab 'em by the pussy."[38] The incident's widespread media exposure led to Trump's first public apology during his 2016 presidential campaign[39] and caused outrage across the political spectrum.[40]
Business career
Real estate
Starting in 1968, Trump was employed at his father's real estate company, Trump Management, which owned racially segregated middle-class rental housing in New York City's outer boroughs.[42][43] In 1971, his father made him president of the company and he began using the Trump Organization as an umbrella brand.[44] In 1975, Trump settled a 1973 Department of Justice civil rights lawsuit alleging housing discrimination against black renters by consenting to desegregate.[45] Between 1991 and 2009, he filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection for six of his businesses: the Plaza Hotel in Manhattan, the casinos in Atlantic City, New Jersey, and the Trump Hotels & Casino Resorts company.[46]
Manhattan and Chicago developments
Trump attracted public attention in 1978 with the launch of his family's first Manhattan venture, the renovation of the derelict Commodore Hotel, adjacent to Grand Central Terminal.[47] The financing was facilitated by a $400 million city property tax abatement arranged for him by his father who also, jointly with Hyatt, guaranteed a $70 million bank construction loan.[43][48] The hotel reopened in 1980 as the Grand Hyatt Hotel,[49] and that same year, he obtained rights to develop Trump Tower, a mixed-use skyscraper in Midtown Manhattan.[50] The building houses the headquarters of the Trump Corporation and Trump's PAC and was his primary residence until 2019.[51]
In 1988, Trump acquired the Plaza Hotel with a loan from a consortium of sixteen banks.[52] The hotel filed for bankruptcy protection in 1992, and a reorganization plan was approved a month later, with the banks taking control of the property.[53] In 1995, he defaulted on over $3 billion of bank loans, and the lenders seized the Plaza Hotel along with most of his other properties in a "vast and humiliating restructuring" that allowed him to avoid personal bankruptcy.[54][55] The lead bank's attorney said of the banks' decision that they "all agreed that he'd be better alive than dead".[54]
In 1996, Trump acquired and renovated the mostly vacant 71-story skyscraper at 40 Wall Street, later rebranded as the Trump Building.[56] In the early 1990s, he won the right to develop a 70-acre (28 ha) tract in the Lincoln Square neighborhood near the Hudson River. Struggling with debt from other ventures in 1994, he sold most of his interest in the project to Asian investors, who financed the project's completion, Riverside South.[57]
Trump's last major construction project was the 92-story mixed-use Trump International Hotel and Tower in Chicago which opened in 2008. In 2024, the New York Times and ProPublica reported that the Internal Revenue Service was investigating whether he had twice written off losses incurred through construction cost overruns and lagging sales of residential units in the building he had declared to be worthless on his 2008 tax return.[58]
Atlantic City casinos
In 1984, Trump opened Harrah's at Trump Plaza, a hotel and casino, with financing and management help from the Holiday Corporation.[59] It was unprofitable, and he paid Holiday $70 million in May 1986 to take sole control.[60] In 1985, he bought the unopened Atlantic City Hilton Hotel and renamed it Trump Castle.[61] Both casinos filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection in 1992.[62]
Trump bought a third Atlantic City venue in 1988, the Trump Taj Mahal. It was financed with $675 million in junk bonds and completed for $1.1 billion, opening in April 1990.[59] He filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection in 1991. Under the provisions of the restructuring agreement, he gave up half his initial stake and personally guaranteed future performance.[63] To reduce his $900 million of personal debt, he sold the Trump Shuttle airline; his megayacht, the Trump Princess, which had been leased to his casinos and kept docked; and other businesses.[64]
In 1995, Trump founded Trump Hotels & Casino Resorts (THCR), which assumed ownership of the Trump Plaza.[65] THCR purchased the Taj Mahal and the Trump Castle in 1996 and went bankrupt in 2004 and 2009, leaving him with 10 percent ownership.[59] He remained chairman until 2009.[66]
Clubs
In 1985, Trump acquired the Mar-a-Lago estate in Palm Beach, Florida.[67] In 1995, he converted the estate into a private club with an initiation fee and annual dues. He continued to use a wing of the house as a private residence.[68] He declared the club his primary residence in 2019.[51] The Trump Organization began building and buying golf courses in 1999.[69] It owns fourteen and manages another three Trump-branded courses worldwide.[70]
Side ventures
The Trump Organization has licensed the Trump name for consumer products and services, including foodstuffs, apparel, learning courses, and home furnishings.[71] According to The Washington Post, there are more than 50 licensing or management deals involving his name, and they have generated at least $59 million in revenue for his companies.[72] By 2018, only two consumer goods companies continued to license his name.[71]
In September 1983, Trump purchased the New Jersey Generals, a team in the United States Football League. After the 1985 season, the league folded, largely due to his attempt to move to a fall schedule (when it would have competed with the NFL for audience) and trying to force a merger with the NFL by bringing an antitrust suit.[73]
Trump and his Plaza Hotel hosted several boxing matches at the Atlantic City Convention Hall.[59][74] In 1989 and 1990, he lent his name to the Tour de Trump cycling stage race, an attempt to create an American equivalent of European races such as the Tour de France or the Giro d'Italia.[75]
From 1986 to 1988, Trump purchased significant blocks of shares in various public companies while suggesting that he intended to take over the company and then sold his shares for a profit,[76] leading some observers to think he was engaged in greenmail.[77] The New York Times found that he initially made millions of dollars in such stock transactions, but "lost most, if not all, of those gains after investors stopped taking his takeover talk seriously".[76]
In 1988, Trump purchased the Eastern Air Lines Shuttle, financing the purchase with $380 million (equivalent to $979 million in 2023)[78] in loans from a syndicate of 22 banks. He renamed the airline Trump Shuttle and operated it until 1992.[79] He defaulted on his loans in 1991, and ownership passed to the banks.[80]
In 1992, Trump, his siblings Maryanne, Elizabeth, and Robert, and his cousin John W. Walter, each with a 20 percent share, formed All County Building Supply & Maintenance Corp. The company had no offices and is alleged to have been a shell company for paying the vendors providing services and supplies for Trump's rental units, then billing those services and supplies to Trump Management with markups of 20–50 percent and more. The owners shared the proceeds generated by the markups. The increased costs were used to get state approval for increasing the rents of his rent-stabilized units.[81]
In 1996, Trump purchased the Miss Universe pageants, including Miss USA and Miss Teen USA.[82] Due to disagreements with CBS about scheduling, he took both pageants to NBC in 2002.[83][84] In 2007, he received a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame for his work as producer of Miss Universe.[85] NBC and Univision dropped the pageants in June 2015 in reaction to Trump's comments about Mexican immigrants.[86]
Trump University
In 2004, Trump co-founded Trump University, a company that sold real estate seminars for up to $35,000.[87] After New York State authorities notified the company that its use of "university" violated state law (as it was not an academic institution), its name was changed to the Trump Entrepreneur Initiative in 2010.[88]
In 2013, the State of New York filed a $40 million civil suit against Trump University, alleging that the company made false statements and defrauded consumers.[89] Additionally, two class actions were filed in federal court against Trump and his companies. Internal documents revealed that employees were instructed to use a hard-sell approach, and former employees testified that Trump University had defrauded or lied to its students.[90][91][92] Shortly after he won the 2016 presidential election, he agreed to pay a total of $25 million to settle the three cases.[93]
Foundation
The Donald J. Trump Foundation was a private foundation established in 1988.[94][95] From 1987 to 2006, Trump gave his foundation $5.4 million which had been spent by the end of 2006. After donating a total of $65,000 in 2007–2008, he stopped donating any personal funds to the charity,[96] which received millions from other donors, including $5 million from Vince McMahon.[97] The foundation gave to health- and sports-related charities, conservative groups,[98] and charities that held events at Trump properties.[96]
In 2016, The Washington Post reported that the charity committed several potential legal and ethical violations, including alleged self-dealing and possible tax evasion.[99] Also in 2016, the New York attorney general determined the foundation to be in violation of state law, for soliciting donations without submitting to required annual external audits, and ordered it to cease its fundraising activities in New York immediately.[100] Trump's team announced in December 2016 that the foundation would be dissolved.[101]
In June 2018, the New York attorney general's office filed a civil suit against the foundation, Trump, and his adult children, seeking $2.8 million in restitution and additional penalties.[102] In December 2018, the foundation ceased operation and disbursed its assets to other charities.[103] In November 2019, a New York state judge ordered Trump to pay $2 million to a group of charities for misusing the foundation's funds, in part to finance his presidential campaign.[104][105]
Legal affairs and bankruptcies
Roy Cohn was Trump's fixer, lawyer, and mentor for 13 years in the 1970s and 1980s.[106] According to Trump, Cohn sometimes waived fees due to their friendship.[106] In 1973, Cohn helped Trump countersue the U.S. government for $100 million (equivalent to $686 million in 2023)[78] over its charges that Trump's properties had racial discriminatory practices. Trump's counterclaims were dismissed, and the government's case was settled with the Trumps signing a consent decree agreeing to desegregate.[107] In 1975, an agreement was struck requiring Trump's properties to furnish the New York Urban League with a list of all apartment vacancies, every week for two years, among other things.[108] Cohn introduced political consultant Roger Stone to Trump, who enlisted Stone's services to deal with the federal government.[109]
According to a review of state and federal court files conducted by USA Today in 2018, Trump and his businesses had been involved in more than 4,000 state and federal legal actions.[110] While he has not filed for personal bankruptcy, his over-leveraged hotel and casino businesses in Atlantic City and New York filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection six times between 1991 and 2009.[111] They continued to operate while the banks restructured debt and reduced his shares in the properties.[111]
During the 1980s, more than 70 banks had lent Trump $4 billion.[112] After his corporate bankruptcies of the early 1990s, most major banks, with the exception of Deutsche Bank, declined to lend to him.[113] After the January 6 Capitol attack, the bank decided not to do business with him or his company in the future.[114]
Wealth
In 1982, Trump made the initial Forbes list of wealthy people for holding a share of his family's estimated $200 million net worth (equivalent to $631 million in 2023).[78] His losses in the 1980s dropped him from the list between 1990 and 1995.[115] After filing the mandatory financial disclosure report with the FEC in July 2015, he announced a net worth of about $10 billion. Records released by the FEC showed at least $1.4 billion in assets and $265 million in liabilities.[116] Forbes estimated his net worth dropped by $1.4 billion between 2015 and 2018.[117] In their 2024 billionaires ranking, his net worth was estimated to be $2.3 billion (1,438th in the world).[118]
In 2018, journalist Jonathan Greenberg reported that Trump had called him in 1984 pretending to be a fictional Trump Organization official named "John Barron". Greenberg said that, to get a higher ranking on the Forbes 400 list of wealthy Americans, Trump, speaking as "Barron", falsely asserted that Donald Trump owned more than 90 percent of his father's business. Greenberg also wrote that Forbes had vastly overestimated Trump's wealth and wrongly included him on the 1982, 1983, and 1984 rankings.[119]
Trump has often said he began his career with "a small loan of a million dollars" from his father and that he had to pay it back with interest.[120] He was a millionaire by age eight, borrowed at least $60 million from his father, largely failed to repay those loans, and received another $413 million (2018 dollars adjusted for inflation) from his father's company.[121][81] In 2018, he and his family were reported to have committed tax fraud, and the New York State Department of Taxation and Finance started an investigation.[81] His investments underperformed the stock and New York property markets.[122][123] Forbes estimated in October 2018 that his net worth declined from $4.5 billion in 2015 to $3.1 billion in 2017 and his product-licensing income from $23 million to $3 million.[124]
Trump's tax returns from 1985 to 1994 show net losses totaling $1.17 billion. The losses were higher than those of almost every other American taxpayer. The losses in 1990 and 1991, more than $250 million each year, were more than double those of the nearest taxpayers. In 1995, his reported losses were $915.7 million (equivalent to $1.83 billion in 2023).[76][125][78]
In 2020, The New York Times obtained Trump's tax information extending over two decades. Its reporters found that he reported losses of hundreds of millions of dollars. Since 2010 he had also failed to pay back $287 million in loans. During the 15 years prior to 2020, using tax credits for business losses, he paid no income taxes in 10 of those years and $750 each in 2016 and 2017. He balanced his businesses' losses by selling and borrowing against assets, including a $100 million mortgage on Trump Tower (refinanced in 2022) and the liquidation of over $200 million in stocks and bonds. He personally guaranteed $421 million in debt, most of which is due by 2024.[126]
As of October 2021[update], Trump had over $1.3 billion in debts, much of which was secured by his assets.[127] In 2020, he owed $640 million to banks and trust organizations, including Bank of China, Deutsche Bank, and UBS, and approximately $450 million to unknown creditors. The value of his assets exceeds his debt.[128]
Media career
Trump has produced 19 books under his name, most written or co-written by ghostwriters.[129] His first book, The Art of the Deal (1987), was a New York Times Best Seller. While he was credited as co-author, the entire book was written by Tony Schwartz. According to The New Yorker, the book made Trump famous as an "emblem of the successful tycoon".[130]
Trump had cameos in many films and television shows from 1985 to 2001.[131]
Starting in the 1990s, Trump was a guest 24 times on the nationally syndicated Howard Stern Show.[132] He had his own short-form talk radio program, Trumped!, from 2004 to 2008.[133][134] From 2011 until 2015, he was a guest commentator on Fox & Friends.[135][136]
From 2004 to 2015, Trump was co-producer and host of reality shows The Apprentice and The Celebrity Apprentice. On the shows, he was a superrich and successful chief executive who eliminated contestants with the catchphrase "you're fired". The New York Times called his portrayal a "highly flattering, highly fictionalized version of Mr. Trump". The shows remade his image for millions of viewers nationwide.[137][138] With the related licensing agreements, they earned him more than $400 million.[139]
In 2021, Trump, who had been a member of SAG-AFTRA since 1989, resigned to avoid a disciplinary hearing regarding the January 6 attack.[140] Two days later, the union permanently barred him.[141]
Early political aspirations (1987–2014)
Trump registered as a Republican in 1987;[142] a member of the Independence Party, the New York state affiliate of the Reform Party, in 1999;[143] a Democrat in 2001; a Republican in 2009; unaffiliated in 2011; and a Republican in 2012.[142]
In 1987, Trump placed full-page advertisements in three major newspapers,[144] expressing his views on foreign policy and how to eliminate the federal budget deficit.[145] In 1988, he approached Lee Atwater, asking to be put into consideration to be Republican nominee George H. W. Bush's running mate. Bush found the request "strange and unbelievable".[146] Trump was a candidate in the 2000 Reform Party presidential primaries for three months, but withdrew from the race in February 2000.[147][148][149] In 2011, Trump speculated about running against President Barack Obama in the 2012 election, making his first speaking appearance at the Conservative Political Action Conference (CPAC) in February and giving speeches in early primary states.[150][151] In May, he announced he would not run.[150] His presidential ambitions were generally not taken seriously at the time.[152]
2016 presidential election
Campaign
Trump announced his candidacy in June 2015.[153][154] His campaign was initially not taken seriously by political analysts, but he quickly rose to the top of opinion polls.[155] He became the front-runner in March 2016[156] and was declared the presumptive Republican nominee in May.[157]
Trump's fame and provocative statements earned him an unprecedented amount of free media coverage, elevating his standing in the Republican primaries.[158] He adopted the phrase "truthful hyperbole", coined by his ghostwriter Tony Schwartz, to describe his public speaking style.[130][159] His campaign statements were often opaque and suggestive,[160] and a record number were false.[161][162][163] He said he disdained political correctness and frequently made claims of media bias.[164][165]
Hillary Clinton led Trump in national polling averages throughout the campaign, but, in early July, her lead narrowed.[166] In mid-July he selected Indiana governor Mike Pence as his running mate,[167] and the two were officially nominated at the 2016 Republican National Convention.[168] Trump and Clinton faced off in three presidential debates in September and October 2016. He twice refused to say whether he would accept the result of the election.[169]
Trump described NATO as "obsolete"[170][171] and espoused views that were described as noninterventionist and protectionist.[172] His campaign platform emphasized renegotiating U.S.–China relations and free trade agreements such as NAFTA, strongly enforcing immigration laws, and building a new wall along the U.S.–Mexico border. Other campaign positions included pursuing energy independence while opposing climate change regulations, modernizing services for veterans, repealing and replacing the Affordable Care Act, abolishing Common Core education standards, investing in infrastructure, simplifying the tax code while reducing taxes, and imposing tariffs on imports by companies that offshore jobs. He advocated increasing military spending and extreme vetting or banning of immigrants from Muslim-majority countries.[173] Trump's proposed immigration policies were a topic of bitter debate during the 2016 campaign. He promised to build a wall on the Mexico–U.S. border to restrict illegal movement and vowed that Mexico would pay for it.[174] He pledged to deport millions of illegal immigrants residing in the U.S.,[175] and criticized birthright citizenship for incentivizing "anchor babies".[176] According to an analysis in Political Science Quarterly, Trump made "explicitly racist appeals to whites" during his 2016 presidential campaign.[177] In particular, his campaign launch speech drew criticism for claiming Mexican immigrants were "bringing drugs, they're bringing crime, they're rapists";[178] in response, NBC fired him from Celebrity Apprentice.[179] His later comments about a Mexican-American judge presiding over a civil suit regarding Trump University were also criticized as racist.[180]
Financial disclosures
Trump's FEC-required reports listed assets above $1.4 billion and outstanding debts of at least $315 million.[116][181] He did not release his tax returns, contrary to the practice of every major candidate since 1976 and his promises in 2014 and 2015 to do so if he ran for office.[182][183] He said his tax returns were being audited, and that his lawyers had advised him against releasing them.[184] After a lengthy court battle to block release of his tax returns and other records to the Manhattan district attorney for a criminal investigation, including two appeals by Trump to the U.S. Supreme Court, in February 2021 the high court allowed the records to be released to the prosecutor for review by a grand jury.[185][186]
In October 2016, portions of Trump's state filings for 1995 were leaked to a reporter from The New York Times. They show that he had declared a loss of $916 million that year, which could have let him avoid taxes for up to 18 years.[187]
Results
On November 8, 2016, Trump received 306 pledged electoral votes versus 232 for Clinton, although, after elector defections on both sides, the official count was ultimately 304 to 227.[188] The fifth person to be elected president while losing the popular vote,[b] he received nearly 2.9 million fewer votes than Clinton.[189] He was the only president who neither served in the military nor held any government office prior to becoming president.[190]
Trump won 30 states, including Michigan, Pennsylvania, and Wisconsin, states which had been considered a blue wall of Democratic strongholds since the 1990s. Clinton won 20 states and the District of Columbia. His victory marked the return of an undivided Republican government—a Republican president combined with Republican control of both chambers of Congress.[191]
In late 2016, Time named Trump its Person of the Year.[192]
Trump's election victory sparked protests in major U.S. cities.[193][194] On the day after his inauguration, an estimated 2.6 million people worldwide, including an estimated half million in Washington, D.C., protested against him in the Women's Marches.[195]
First presidency (2017–2021)
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Early actions
Trump was inaugurated on January 20, 2017. During his first week in office, he signed six executive orders, authorizing interim procedures in anticipation of repealing the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act ("Obamacare"), withdrawal from the Trans-Pacific Partnership negotiations, reinstatement of the Mexico City policy, advancement of the Keystone XL and Dakota Access Pipeline construction projects, reinforcement of border security, and a planning and design process to construct a wall along the U.S. border with Mexico.[196]
Trump's daughter Ivanka and son-in-law Jared Kushner became his assistant and senior advisor, respectively.[197][198]
Conflicts of interest
Before being inaugurated, Trump moved his businesses into a revocable trust,[199][200] rather than a blind trust or equivalent arrangement "to cleanly sever himself from his business interests".[201] He continued to profit from his businesses and to know how his administration's policies affected his businesses.[200][202] Although he said he would eschew "new foreign deals", the Trump Organization pursued expansions of its operations in Scotland, Dubai, and the Dominican Republic.[200][202] Lobbyists, foreign government officials, and Trump donors and allies generated hundreds of millions of dollars for his resorts and hotels.[203]
Trump was sued for violating the Domestic and Foreign Emoluments Clauses of the U.S. Constitution, marking the first time that the clauses had been substantively litigated.[204] One case was dismissed in lower court.[205] Two were dismissed by the U.S. Supreme Court as moot after the end of his term.[206]
Domestic policy
Trump took office at the height of the longest economic expansion in American history,[207] which began in 2009 and continued until February 2020, when the COVID-19 recession began.[208]
In December 2017, Trump signed the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act of 2017. It reduced tax rates for businesses and individuals and set the penalty associated with the Affordable Care Act's individual mandate to $0.[209][210] The Trump administration claimed that the act would not decrease government revenue, but 2018 revenues were 7.6 percent lower than projected.[211]
Under Trump, the federal budget deficit increased by almost 50 percent, to nearly $1 trillion in 2019.[212] By the end of his term, the U.S. national debt increased by 39 percent, reaching $27.75 trillion, and the U.S. debt-to-GDP ratio hit a post-World War II high.[213] Trump also failed to deliver the $1 trillion infrastructure spending plan on which he had campaigned.[214]
Trump is the only modern U.S. president to leave office with a smaller workforce than when he took office, by 3 million people.[207][215]
Trump rejects the scientific consensus on climate change.[216][217][218][219] He reduced the budget for renewable energy research by 40 percent and reversed Obama-era policies directed at curbing climate change.[220] He withdrew from the Paris Agreement, making the U.S. the only nation to not ratify it.[221]
Trump aimed to boost the production and exports of fossil fuels.[222][223] Natural gas expanded under Trump, but coal continued to decline.[224][225] He rolled back more than 100 federal environmental regulations, including those that curbed greenhouse gas emissions, air and water pollution, and the use of toxic substances. He weakened protections for animals and environmental standards for federal infrastructure projects, and expanded permitted areas for drilling and resource extraction, such as allowing drilling in the Arctic Refuge.[226]
In 2017, Trump signed Executive Order 13771, which directed that, for every new regulation, federal agencies "identify" two existing regulations for elimination, although it did not require elimination.[227] He dismantled many federal regulations on health,[228][229] labor,[230][229] and the environment,[231][229] among others, including a bill that made it easier for severely mentally ill persons to buy guns.[232] During his first six weeks in office, he delayed, suspended, or reversed ninety federal regulations,[233] often "after requests by the regulated industries".[234] The Institute for Policy Integrity found that 78 percent of his proposals were blocked by courts or did not prevail over litigation.[235]
During his campaign, Trump vowed to repeal and replace the Affordable Care Act.[236] In office, he scaled back the Act's implementation through executive orders.[237][238] He expressed a desire to "let Obamacare fail"; his administration halved the enrollment period and drastically reduced funding for enrollment promotion.[239][240] In June 2018, the Trump administration joined 18 Republican-led states in arguing before the Supreme Court that the elimination of the financial penalties associated with the individual mandate had rendered the Act unconstitutional.[241][242] Their pleading would have eliminated health insurance coverage for up to 23 million Americans, but was unsuccessful.[241] During the 2016 campaign, Trump promised to protect funding for Medicare and other social safety-net programs. In January 2020, he expressed willingness to consider cuts to them.[243]
In response to the opioid epidemic, Trump signed legislation in 2018 to increase funding for drug treatments, but was widely criticized for failing to make a concrete strategy. U.S. opioid overdose deaths declined slightly in 2018, but surged to a record 50,052 in 2019.[244]
Trump barred organizations that provide abortions or abortion referrals from receiving federal funds.[245] He said he supported "traditional marriage", but considered the nationwide legality of same-sex marriage "settled".[246] His administration rolled back key components of the Obama administration's workplace protections against discrimination of LGBTQ people.[247] His attempted rollback of anti-discrimination protections for transgender patients in August 2020 was halted by a federal judge after a Supreme Court ruling extended employees' civil rights protections to gender identity and sexual orientation.[248]
Trump has said he is opposed to gun control, although his views have shifted over time.[249] After several mass shootings during his term, he said he would propose legislation related to guns, but he abandoned that effort in November 2019.[250] His administration took an anti-marijuana position, revoking Obama-era policies that provided protections for states that legalized marijuana.[251]
Trump is a long-time advocate of capital punishment.[252][253] Under his administration, the federal government executed 13 prisoners, more than in the previous 56 years combined, ending a 17-year moratorium.[254] In 2016, he said he supported the use of interrogation torture methods such as waterboarding.[255][256]
Race relations
Trump's comments on the 2017 Unite the Right rally, condemning "this egregious display of hatred, bigotry and violence on many sides" and stating that there were "very fine people on both sides", were criticized as implying a moral equivalence between the white supremacist demonstrators and the counter-protesters.[257]
In a January 2018 discussion of immigration legislation, Trump reportedly referred to El Salvador, Haiti, Honduras, and African nations as "shithole countries".[258] His remarks were condemned as racist.[259]
In July 2019, Trump tweeted that four Democratic congresswomen—all from minorities, three of whom are native-born Americans—should "go back" to the countries they "came from".[260] Two days later the House of Representatives voted 240–187, mostly along party lines, to condemn his "racist comments".[261] White nationalist publications and social media praised his remarks, which continued over the following days.[262] He continued to make similar remarks during his 2020 campaign.[263]
In June 2020, during the George Floyd protests, federal law-enforcement officials controversially used less lethal weapons to remove a largely peaceful crowd of lawful protesters from Lafayette Square, outside the White House.[264][265] Trump then posed with a Bible for a photo-op at the nearby St. John's Episcopal Church,[264][266][267] with religious leaders condemning both the treatment of protesters and the photo opportunity itself.[268] Many retired military leaders and defense officials condemned his proposal to use the U.S. military against anti-police-brutality protesters.[269]
Pardons and commutations
Trump granted 237 requests for clemency, fewer than all presidents since 1900 with the exception of George H. W. Bush and George W. Bush.[270] Only 25 of them had been vetted by the Justice Department's Office of the Pardon Attorney; the others were granted to people with personal or political connections to him, his family, and his allies, or recommended by celebrities.[271][272] In his last full day in office, he granted 73 pardons and commuted 70 sentences.[273] Several Trump allies were not eligible for pardons under Justice Department rules, and in other cases the department had opposed clemency.[271] The pardons of three military service members convicted of or charged with violent crimes were opposed by military leaders.[274]
Immigration
As president, he frequently described illegal immigration as an "invasion" and conflated immigrants with the criminal gang MS-13.[275] Trump drastically escalated immigration enforcement, including implementing harsher immigration enforcement policies against asylum seekers from Central America than any modern U.S. president.[276][277]
From 2018 onward, Trump deployed nearly 6,000 troops to the U.S.–Mexico border[278] to stop most Central American migrants from seeking asylum. In 2020, his administration widened the public charge rule to further restrict immigrants who might use government benefits from getting permanent residency.[279] He reduced the number of refugees admitted to record lows. When he took office, the annual limit was 110,000; he set a limit of 18,000 in the 2020 fiscal year and 15,000 in the 2021 fiscal year.[280][281] Additional restrictions implemented by the Trump administration caused significant bottlenecks in processing refugee applications, resulting in fewer refugees accepted than the allowed limits.[282]
Travel ban
Following the 2015 San Bernardino attack, Trump proposed to ban Muslim foreigners from entering the U.S. until stronger vetting systems could be implemented.[283] He later reframed the proposed ban to apply to countries with a "proven history of terrorism".[284]
On January 27, 2017, Trump signed Executive Order 13769, which suspended admission of refugees for 120 days and denied entry to citizens of Iraq, Iran, Libya, Somalia, Sudan, Syria, and Yemen for 90 days, citing security concerns. The order took effect immediately and without warning, causing chaos at airports.[285][286] Protests began at airports the next day,[285][286] and legal challenges resulted in nationwide preliminary injunctions.[287] A March 6 revised order, which excluded Iraq and gave other exemptions, again was blocked by federal judges in three states.[288][289] In a decision in June 2017, the Supreme Court ruled that the ban could be enforced on visitors who lack a "credible claim of a bona fide relationship with a person or entity in the United States".[290]
The temporary order was replaced by Presidential Proclamation 9645 on September 24, 2017, which restricted travel from the originally targeted countries except Iraq and Sudan, and further banned travelers from North Korea and Chad, along with certain Venezuelan officials.[291] After lower courts partially blocked the new restrictions, the Supreme Court allowed the September version to go into full effect on December 4, 2017,[292] and ultimately upheld the travel ban in a ruling in June 2019.[293]
Family separation at the border
The Trump administration separated more than 5,400 children of migrant families from their parents at the U.S.–Mexico border, a sharp increase in the number of family separations at the border starting from the summer of 2017.[294][295] In April 2018, the administration announced a "zero tolerance" policy whereby adults suspected of illegal entry were to be detained and criminally prosecuted while their children were taken away as unaccompanied alien minors.[296][297] The policy was unprecedented in previous administrations and sparked public outrage.[298][299] Trump falsely asserted that his administration was merely following the law, blaming Democrats, despite the separations being his administration's policy.[300][301][302]
Although Trump originally argued that the separations could not be stopped by an executive order, he acceded to intense public objection and signed an executive order in June 2018, mandating that migrant families be detained together unless "there is a concern" of a risk to the child.[303][304] On June 26, 2018, Judge Dana Sabraw concluded that the Trump administration had "no system in place to keep track of" the separated children, nor any effective measures for family communication and reunification;[305] Sabraw ordered for the families to be reunited and family separations stopped except in limited circumstances.[306] After the order, the administration separated more than a thousand migrant children from their families; the ACLU contended that the administration had abused its discretion and asked Sabraw to more narrowly define the circumstances warranting separation.[295]
Trump wall and government shutdown
One of Trump's central campaign promises was to build a 1,000-mile (1,600 km) border wall to Mexico and have Mexico pay for it.[307] By the end of his term, the U.S. had built "40 miles [64 km] of new primary wall and 33 miles [53 km] of secondary wall" in locations where there had been no barriers and 365 miles (587 km) of primary or secondary border fencing replacing dilapidated or outdated barriers.[308]
In 2018, Trump refused to sign any appropriations bill from Congress unless it allocated $5.6 billion for the border wall,[309] resulting in the federal government partially shutting down for 35 days from December 2018 to January 2019, the longest U.S. government shutdown in history.[310][311] Around 800,000 government employees were furloughed or worked without pay.[312] Trump and Congress ended the shutdown by approving temporary funding that provided delayed payments to government workers, but no funds for the wall.[310] The shutdown resulted in an estimated permanent loss of $3 billion to the economy, according to the Congressional Budget Office.[313] About half of those polled blamed Trump for the shutdown, and his approval ratings dropped.[314]
To prevent another imminent shutdown in February 2019, Congress passed and Trump signed a funding bill that included $1.375 billion for 55 miles (89 km) of bollard border fencing.[315] He also declared a national emergency on the southern border, intending to divert $6.1 billion of funds Congress had allocated to other purposes.[315] He vetoed a joint resolution to overturn the declaration, and the Senate voted against a veto override.[316] Legal challenges to the diversion of $2.5 billion originally meant for the Department of Defense's drug interdiction efforts[317][318] and $3.6 billion originally meant for military construction[319][320] were unsuccessful.
Foreign policy
Trump described himself as a "nationalist"[321] and his foreign policy as "America First".[322] He praised and supported populist, neo-nationalist, and authoritarian governments.[323] Hallmarks of foreign relations during his tenure included unpredictability, uncertainty, and inconsistency.[322][324] Tensions between the U.S. and its European allies were strained under Trump.[325] He criticized NATO allies and privately suggested on multiple occasions that the U.S. should withdraw from NATO.[326][327]
Trade
Trump withdrew the U.S. from the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) negotiations,[328] imposed tariffs on steel and aluminum imports,[329] and launched a trade war with China by sharply increasing tariffs on 818 categories (worth $50 billion) of Chinese goods imported into the U.S.[330] While he said that import tariffs are paid by China into the U.S. Treasury, they are paid by American companies that import goods from China.[331] Although he pledged during the campaign to significantly reduce the U.S.'s large trade deficits, the trade deficit skyrocketed under Trump.[332] Following a 2017–2018 renegotiation, the United States–Mexico–Canada Agreement (USMCA) became effective in July 2020 as the successor to NAFTA.[333]
Russia
The Trump administration weakened the toughest sanctions imposed by the U.S. against Russian entities after Russia's 2014 annexation of Crimea.[334][335] Trump withdrew the U.S. from the Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces Treaty, citing alleged Russian noncompliance,[336] and supported a potential return of Russia to the G7.[337]
Trump repeatedly praised and rarely criticized Russian president Vladimir Putin[338][339] but opposed some actions of the Russian government.[340][341] After he met Putin at the Helsinki Summit in 2018, he drew bipartisan criticism for accepting Putin's denial of Russian interference in the 2016 presidential election, rather than accepting the findings of U.S. intelligence agencies.[342][343][344] He did not discuss alleged Russian bounties offered to Taliban fighters for attacking American soldiers in Afghanistan with Putin, saying both that he doubted the intelligence and that he was not briefed on it.[345]
East Asia
China, Hong Kong, Taiwan
Trump repeatedly accused China of taking unfair advantage of the U.S.[346] He launched a trade war against China that was widely characterized as a failure,[347][348] sanctioned Huawei for alleged ties to Iran,[349] significantly increased visa restrictions on Chinese students and scholars,[350] and classified China as a currency manipulator.[351] He juxtaposed verbal attacks on China with praise of Chinese Communist Party leader Xi Jinping,[352] which was attributed to trade war negotiations.[353] After initially praising China's handling of COVID-19, he began a campaign of criticism in March 2020.[354]
Trump said he resisted punishing China for its human rights abuses against ethnic minorities in Xinjiang for fear of jeopardizing trade negotiations.[355] In July 2020, his administration imposed sanctions and visa restrictions against senior Chinese officials, in response to expanded mass detention camps holding more than a million of the country's Uyghur minority.[356]
North Korea
In 2017, when North Korea's nuclear weapons were increasingly seen as a serious threat,[357] Trump escalated his rhetoric, warning that North Korean aggression would be met with "fire and fury like the world has never seen".[358][359] In 2017, he declared that he wanted North Korea's "complete denuclearization", and engaged in name-calling with leader Kim Jong Un.[358][360] After this period of tension, he and Kim exchanged at least 27 letters in which the two men described a warm personal friendship.[361][362] In March 2019, he lifted some U.S. sanctions against North Korea against the advice of his Treasury Department.[363]
Trump, the first sitting U.S. president to meet a North Korean leader, met Kim three times: in Singapore in 2018, in Hanoi in 2019, and in the Korean Demilitarized Zone in 2019.[364] However, no denuclearization agreement was reached,[365] and talks in October 2019 broke down after one day.[366] While conducting no nuclear tests since 2017, North Korea continued to build up its arsenal of nuclear bombs and ballistic missiles.[367][368]
Middle East
Afghanistan
U.S. troop numbers in Afghanistan increased from 8,500 in January 2017 to 14,000 a year later,[369] reversing Trump's preelection position critical of further involvement in Afghanistan.[370] In February 2020, his administration signed the United States–Taliban deal, which called for the withdrawal of foreign troops in 14 months "contingent on a guarantee from the Taliban that Afghan soil will not be used by terrorists with aims to attack the United States or its allies" and for the U.S. to seek the release of 5,000 Taliban imprisoned by the Afghan government.[371][372][373] By the end of his term, 5,000 Taliban had been released, and, despite the Taliban continuing attacks on Afghan forces and integrating Al-Qaeda members into its leadership, U.S. troops had been reduced to 2,500.[373]
Israel
Trump supported many of the policies of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.[374] Under Trump, the U.S. recognized Jerusalem as the capital of Israel[375] and Israeli sovereignty over the Golan Heights,[376] leading to international condemnation including from the UN General Assembly, European Union, and Arab League.[377][378] In 2020, the White House hosted the signing of the Abraham Accords between Israel and the United Arab Emirates and Bahrain to normalize their foreign relations.[379]
Saudi Arabia
Trump actively supported the Saudi Arabian–led intervention in Yemen against the Houthis and in 2017 signed a $110 billion agreement to sell arms to Saudi Arabia.[380] In 2018, the U.S. provided limited intelligence and logistical support for the intervention.[381][382] Following the 2019 attack on Saudi oil facilities, which the U.S. and Saudi Arabia blamed on Iran, he approved the deployment of 3,000 additional U.S. troops, including two Patriot batteries and a Terminal High Altitude Area Defense system, to Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates.[383]
Syria
Trump ordered missile strikes in 2017 and 2018 against the Assad regime in Syria, in retaliation for the Khan Shaykhun and Douma chemical attacks, respectively.[384][385] In December 2018, he declared "we have won against ISIS", contradicting Department of Defense assessments, and ordered the withdrawal of troops from Syria.[386][387] Mattis resigned in protest, calling Trump's decision an abandonment of the U.S.'s Kurdish allies who played a key role in fighting ISIS.[388]
In 2019, after Trump spoke to Turkish president Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, U.S. troops in northern Syria were withdrawn from the area and Turkey invaded northern Syria, attacking and displacing American-allied Kurds.[389] The U.S. House of Representatives voted 354–60 to condemn Trump's withdrawal from northern Syria.[390][391]
Iran
In May 2018, Trump withdrew the U.S. from the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action, the 2015 agreement that lifted most economic sanctions against Iran in return for restrictions on Iran's nuclear program.[392][393] In August 2020, his administration unsuccessfully attempted to use the nuclear deal to have the UN reimpose sanctions against Iran.[394] Analysts determined that, after the U.S. withdrawal, Iran moved closer to developing a nuclear weapon.[395][396]
On January 1, 2020, Trump ordered the assassination of Qasem Soleimani, who had planned nearly every significant Iranian and Iranian-backed operation over the preceding two decades.[397][398] Iran retaliated with missile strikes against two U.S. airbases in Iraq. Dozens of soldiers sustained traumatic brain injuries. Trump downplayed their injuries, and they were initially denied Purple Heart medals and the associated benefits.[399][395]
Personnel
The Trump administration had a high turnover of personnel, particularly among White House staff. By the end of his first year in office, 34 percent of his original staff had resigned, been fired, or been reassigned.[400] As of early July 2018[update], 61 percent of his senior aides had left[401] and 141 staffers had left in the previous year.[402] Both figures set a record for recent presidents—more change in the first 13 months than his four immediate predecessors saw in their first two years.[403] Notable early departures included National Security Advisor Michael Flynn (after just 25 days), and Press Secretary Sean Spicer.[403] Close personal aides to Trump including Bannon, Hope Hicks, John McEntee, and Keith Schiller quit or were forced out.[404] Some later returned in different posts.[405] He publicly disparaged several of his former top officials, calling them incompetent, stupid, or crazy.[406]
Trump had four White House chiefs of staff, marginalizing or pushing out several.[407] Reince Priebus was replaced after seven months by retired Marine general John F. Kelly.[408] Kelly resigned in December 2018 after a tumultuous tenure in which his influence waned, and Trump subsequently disparaged him.[409] Kelly was succeeded by Mick Mulvaney as acting chief of staff; he was replaced in March 2020 by Mark Meadows.[407]
On May 9, 2017, Trump dismissed FBI director James Comey. While initially attributing this action to Comey's conduct in the investigation about Hillary Clinton's emails, Trump said a few days later that he was concerned with Comey's role in the ongoing Trump-Russia investigations, and that he had intended to fire Comey earlier.[410] At a private conversation in February, he said he hoped Comey would drop the investigation into Flynn.[411] In March and April, he asked Comey to "lift the cloud impairing his ability to act" by saying publicly that the FBI was not investigating him.[411][412]
Trump lost three of his 15 original cabinet members within his first year.[413] Health and Human Services secretary Tom Price was forced to resign in September 2017 due to excessive use of private charter jets and military aircraft.[413][404] Environmental Protection Agency administrator Scott Pruitt resigned in 2018 and Secretary of the Interior Ryan Zinke in January 2019 amid multiple investigations into their conduct.[414][415]
Trump was slow to appoint second-tier officials in the executive branch, saying many of the positions are unnecessary. In October 2017, there were still hundreds of sub-cabinet positions without a nominee.[416] By January 8, 2019, of 706 key positions, 433 had been filled (61 percent) and he had no nominee for 264 (37 percent).[417]
Judiciary
Trump appointed 226 Article III judges, including 54 to the courts of appeals and three to the Supreme Court: Neil Gorsuch, Brett Kavanaugh, and Amy Coney Barrett.[418] His Supreme Court nominees were noted as having politically shifted the Court to the right.[419][420][421] In the 2016 campaign, he pledged that Roe v. Wade would be overturned "automatically" if he were elected and provided the opportunity to appoint two or three anti-abortion justices. He later took credit when Roe was overturned in Dobbs v. Jackson Women's Health Organization; all three of his Supreme Court nominees voted with the majority.[422][423][424]
Trump disparaged courts and judges he disagreed with, often in personal terms, and questioned the judiciary's constitutional authority. His attacks on the courts drew rebukes from observers, including sitting federal judges, concerned about the effect of his statements on the judicial independence and public confidence in the judiciary.[425][426][427]
COVID-19 pandemic
Initial response
The first confirmed case of COVID-19 in the U.S. was reported on January 20, 2020.[428] The outbreak was officially declared a public health emergency by Health and Human Services (HHS) Secretary Alex Azar on January 31, 2020.[429] Trump initially ignored persistent public health warnings and calls for action from health officials within his administration and Secretary Azar.[430] Throughout January and February he focused on economic and political considerations of the outbreak.[431] In February 2020 he publicly asserted that the outbreak in the U.S. was less deadly than influenza, was "very much under control", and would soon be over.[432] On March 19, he privately told Bob Woodward that he was deliberately "playing it down, because I don't want to create a panic".[433]
By mid-March, most global financial markets had severely contracted in response to the pandemic.[434] On March 6, Trump signed the Coronavirus Preparedness and Response Supplemental Appropriations Act, which provided $8.3 billion in emergency funding for federal agencies.[435] On March 11, the World Health Organization (WHO) recognized COVID-19 as a pandemic,[436] and he announced partial travel restrictions for most of Europe, effective March 13.[437] That same day, he gave his first serious assessment of the virus in a nationwide Oval Office address, calling the outbreak "horrible" but "a temporary moment" and saying there was no financial crisis.[438] On March 13, he declared a national emergency, freeing up federal resources.[439] He claimed that "anybody that wants a test can get a test", despite test availability being severely limited.[440] On March 27, he signed the CARES Act—a $2.2 trillion economic stimulus bill—into law following bipartisan negotiations in Congress, becoming the largest stimulus in U.S. history.[441][442]
On April 22, Trump signed an executive order restricting some forms of immigration.[443] In late spring and early summer, with infections and deaths continuing to rise, he adopted a strategy of blaming the states rather than accepting that his initial assessments of the pandemic were overly optimistic or his failure to provide presidential leadership.[444]
White House Coronavirus Task Force
Trump established the White House Coronavirus Task Force on January 29.[445] Beginning in mid-March, he held a daily task force press conference, joined by medical experts and other administration officials,[446] sometimes disagreeing with them by promoting unproven treatments.[447] He was the main speaker at the briefings, where he praised his own response to the pandemic, frequently criticized rival presidential candidate Joe Biden, and denounced the press.[448][failed verification] On March 16, he acknowledged for the first time that the pandemic was not under control and that months of disruption to daily lives and a recession might occur.[449] His repeated use of "Chinese virus" and "China virus" to describe COVID-19 drew criticism from health experts.[450][451]
By early April, as the pandemic worsened and amid criticism of his administration's response, Trump refused to admit any mistakes in his handling of the outbreak, instead blaming the media, Democratic state governors, the previous administration, China, and the WHO.[452] The daily coronavirus task force briefings ended in late April, after a briefing at which he suggested the dangerous idea of injecting a disinfectant to treat COVID-19;[453] the comment was widely condemned by medical professionals.[454][455]
In early May, Trump proposed the phase-out of the coronavirus task force and its replacement with another group centered on reopening the economy. Amid a backlash, he said the task force would "indefinitely" continue.[456] By the end of May, the coronavirus task force's meetings were sharply reduced.[457]
World Health Organization
Prior to the pandemic, Trump criticized the WHO and other international bodies, which he asserted were taking advantage of U.S. aid.[458] His administration's proposed 2021 federal budget, released in February, proposed reducing WHO funding by more than half.[458] In May and April, he accused the WHO of "severely mismanaging" COVID-19, alleged without evidence that the organization was under Chinese control and had enabled the Chinese government's concealment of the pandemic's origins,[458][459][460] and announced that he was withdrawing funding for the organization.[458] These were seen as attempts to distract from his own mishandling of the pandemic.[458][461][462] In July 2020, he announced the formal withdrawal of the U.S. from the WHO, effective July 2021.[459][460] The decision was widely condemned by health and government officials as "short-sighted", "senseless", and "dangerous".[459][460]
Pressure to abandon pandemic mitigation measures
In April 2020, Republican-connected groups organized anti-lockdown protests against the measures state governments were taking to combat the pandemic;[463][464] Trump encouraged the protests on Twitter,[465] although the targeted states did not meet his administration's guidelines for reopening.[466] In April 2020, he first supported, then later criticized, Georgia Governor Brian Kemp's plan to reopen some nonessential businesses.[467] Throughout the spring he increasingly pushed for ending the restrictions to reverse the damage to the country's economy.[468] He often refused to mask at public events, contrary to his administration's April 2020 guidance to wear masks in public[469] and despite nearly unanimous medical consensus that masks are important to preventing spread of the virus.[470] By June, he had said masks were a "double-edged sword"; ridiculed Biden for wearing masks; continually emphasized that mask-wearing was optional; and suggested that wearing a mask was a political statement against him personally.[470] His contradiction of medical recommendations weakened national efforts to mitigate the pandemic.[469][470]
In June and July, Trump said several times that the U.S. would have fewer cases of coronavirus if it did less testing, that having a large number of reported cases "makes us look bad".[471][472] The CDC guideline at the time was that any person exposed to the virus should be "quickly identified and tested" even if they are not showing symptoms, because asymptomatic people can still spread the virus.[473][474] In August 2020 the CDC quietly lowered its recommendation for testing, advising that people who have been exposed to the virus, but are not showing symptoms, "do not necessarily need a test". The change in guidelines was made by HHS political appointees under Trump administration pressure, against the wishes of CDC scientists.[475][476] The day after this political interference was reported, the testing guideline was changed back to its original recommendation.[476]
Despite record numbers of COVID-19 cases in the U.S. from mid-June onward and an increasing percentage of positive test results, Trump largely continued to downplay the pandemic, including his false claim in early July 2020 that 99 percent of COVID-19 cases are "totally harmless".[477][478] He began insisting that all states should resume in-person education in the fall despite a July spike in reported cases.[479]
Political pressure on health agencies
Trump repeatedly pressured federal health agencies to take actions he favored,[475] such as approving unproven treatments[480][481] or speeding up vaccine approvals.[481] Trump administration political appointees at HHS sought to control CDC communications to the public that undermined his claims that the pandemic was under control. CDC resisted many of the changes, but increasingly allowed HHS personnel to review articles and suggest changes before publication.[482][483] Trump alleged without evidence that FDA scientists were part of a "deep state" opposing him and delaying approval of vaccines and treatments to hurt him politically.[484]
Outbreak at the White House
On October 2, 2020, Trump tweeted that he had tested positive for COVID-19, part of a White House outbreak.[485] Later that day he was hospitalized at Walter Reed National Military Medical Center, reportedly due to fever and labored breathing. He was treated with antiviral and experimental antibody drugs and a steroid. He returned to the White House on October 5, still infectious and unwell.[486][487] During and after his treatment he continued to downplay the virus.[486] In 2021, it was revealed that his condition had been far more serious; he had dangerously low blood oxygen levels, a high fever, and lung infiltrates, indicating a severe case.[487] In January 2021, he received a COVID-19 vaccination.[488]
Effects on the 2020 presidential campaign
By July 2020, Trump's handling of the COVID-19 pandemic had become a major issue in the presidential election.[489] Biden sought to make the pandemic the central issue.[490] Polls suggested voters blamed Trump for his pandemic response[489] and disbelieved his rhetoric concerning the virus, with an Ipsos/ABC News poll indicating 65 percent of respondents disapproved of his pandemic response.[491] In the final months of the campaign, he repeatedly said that the U.S. was "rounding the turn" in managing the pandemic, despite increasing cases and deaths.[492] A few days before the November 3 election, the U.S. reported more than 100,000 cases in a single day for the first time.[493]
Investigations
After he assumed office, Trump was the subject of increasing Justice Department and congressional scrutiny, with investigations covering his election campaign, transition, and inauguration, actions taken during his presidency, his private businesses, personal taxes, and charitable foundation.[494] There were ten federal criminal investigations, eight state and local investigations, and twelve congressional investigations.[495]
Financial
In April 2019, the House Oversight Committee issued subpoenas seeking financial details from Trump's banks, Deutsche Bank and Capital One, and his accounting firm, Mazars USA. He sued the banks, Mazars, and committee chair Elijah Cummings to prevent the disclosures.[496] In May, DC District Court judge Amit Mehta ruled that Mazars must comply with the subpoena,[497] and judge Edgardo Ramos of the Southern District Court of New York ruled that the banks must also comply.[498][499] Trump's attorneys appealed.[500] In September 2022, the committee and Trump agreed to a settlement about Mazars, and the accounting firm began turning over documents.[501]
Russian election interference
In January 2017, American intelligence agencies—the CIA, the FBI, and the NSA, represented by the Director of National Intelligence—jointly stated with "high confidence" that the Russian government interfered in the 2016 presidential election to favor the election of Trump.[502][503] In March 2017, FBI Director James Comey told Congress, "[T]he FBI, as part of our counterintelligence mission, is investigating the Russian government's efforts to interfere in the 2016 presidential election. That includes investigating the nature of any links between individuals associated with the Trump campaign and the Russian government, and whether there was any coordination between the campaign and Russia's efforts."[504]
Many suspicious[505] links between Trump associates and Russian officials and spies were discovered and the relationships between Russians and "team Trump", including Manafort, Flynn, and Stone, were widely reported by the press.[506][507][508][509] Members of Trump's campaign and his White House staff, particularly Flynn, were in contact with Russian officials both before and after the election.[510][511] On December 29, 2016, Flynn talked with Russian Ambassador Sergey Kislyak about sanctions that were imposed that same day; Flynn later resigned in the midst of controversy over whether he misled Pence.[512] Trump told Kislyak and Sergei Lavrov in May 2017 he was unconcerned about Russian interference in U.S. elections.[513]
Trump and his allies promoted a conspiracy theory that Ukraine, rather than Russia, interfered in the 2016 election—which was also promoted by Russia to frame Ukraine.[514]
FBI Crossfire Hurricane and 2017 counterintelligence investigations
In July 2016, the FBI launched an investigation, codenamed Crossfire Hurricane, into possible links between Russia and the Trump campaign.[515] After Trump fired FBI director James Comey in May 2017, the FBI opened a counterintelligence investigation into Trump's personal and business dealings with Russia.[516] Crossfire Hurricane was transferred to the Mueller investigation,[517] but Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein ended the investigation into Trump's direct ties to Russia while giving the bureau the false impression that the Robert Mueller's special counsel investigation would pursue the matter.[518][519]
Mueller investigation
In May 2017, Rosenstein appointed former FBI director Mueller special counsel for the Department of Justice (DOJ), ordering him to "examine 'any links and/or coordination between the Russian government' and the Trump campaign". He privately told Mueller to restrict the investigation to criminal matters "in connection with Russia's 2016 election interference".[518] The special counsel also investigated whether Trump's dismissal of James Comey as FBI director constituted obstruction of justice[520] and the Trump campaign's possible ties to Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, Turkey, Qatar, Israel, and China.[521] Trump sought to fire Mueller and shut down the investigation multiple times, but backed down after his staff objected or after changing his mind.[522]
In March 2019, Mueller gave his final report to Attorney General William Barr,[523] which Barr purported to summarize in a letter to Congress. A federal court, and Mueller himself, said Barr mischaracterized the investigation's conclusions and, in so doing, confused the public.[524][525][526] Trump repeatedly claimed that the investigation exonerated him; the Mueller report expressly stated that it did not.[527]
A redacted version of the report, publicly released in April 2019, found that Russia interfered in 2016 to favor Trump.[528] Despite "numerous links between the Russian government and the Trump campaign", the report found that the prevailing evidence "did not establish" that Trump campaign members conspired or coordinated with Russian interference.[529][530] The report revealed sweeping Russian interference[530] and detailed how Trump and his campaign welcomed and encouraged it, believing it would benefit them electorally.[531][532][533][534]
The report also detailed multiple acts of potential obstruction of justice by Trump, but "did not draw ultimate conclusions about the President's conduct".[535][536] Investigators decided they could not "apply an approach that could potentially result in a judgment that the President committed crimes" as an Office of Legal Counsel opinion stated that a sitting president could not be indicted,[537] and investigators would not accuse him of a crime when he cannot clear his name in court.[538] The report concluded that Congress, having the authority to take action against a president for wrongdoing, "may apply the obstruction laws".[537] The House of Representatives subsequently launched an impeachment inquiry following the Trump–Ukraine scandal, but did not pursue an article of impeachment related to the Mueller investigation.[539][540]
Several Trump associates pleaded guilty or were convicted in connection with Mueller's investigation and related cases, including Manafort[541] and Flynn.[542][543] Trump's former attorney Michael Cohen pleaded guilty to lying to Congress about Trump's 2016 attempts to reach a deal with Russia to build a Trump Tower in Moscow. Cohen said he had made the false statements on behalf of Trump.[544] In February 2020, Stone was sentenced to 40 months in prison for lying to Congress and witness tampering. The sentencing judge said Stone "was prosecuted for covering up for the president".[545]
First impeachment
In August 2019, a whistleblower filed a complaint with the Inspector General of the Intelligence Community about a July 25 phone call between Trump and Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelenskyy, during which Trump had pressured Zelenskyy to investigate CrowdStrike and Democratic presidential candidate Biden and his son Hunter.[546] The whistleblower said that the White House had attempted to cover up the incident and that the call was part of a wider campaign by the Trump administration and Trump attorney Rudy Giuliani that may have included withholding financial aid from Ukraine in July 2019 and canceling Pence's May 2019 Ukraine trip.[547]
House Speaker Nancy Pelosi initiated a formal impeachment inquiry on September 24.[548] Trump then confirmed that he withheld military aid from Ukraine, offering contradictory reasons for the decision.[549][550] On September 25, his administration released a memorandum of the phone call which confirmed that, after Zelenskyy mentioned purchasing American anti-tank missiles, Trump asked him to discuss investigating Biden and his son with Giuliani and Barr.[546][551] The testimony of multiple administration officials and former officials confirmed that this was part of a broader effort to further Trump's personal interests by giving him an advantage in the upcoming presidential election.[552] In October, William B. Taylor Jr., the chargé d'affaires for Ukraine, testified before congressional committees that soon after arriving in Ukraine in June 2019, he found that Zelenskyy was being subjected to pressure directed by Trump and led by Giuliani. According to Taylor and others, the goal was to coerce Zelenskyy into making a public commitment to investigate the company that employed Hunter Biden, as well as rumors about Ukrainian involvement in the 2016 U.S. presidential election.[553] He said it was made clear that until Zelenskyy made such an announcement, the administration would not release scheduled military aid for Ukraine and not invite Zelenskyy to the White House.[554]
On December 13, the House Judiciary Committee voted along party lines to pass two articles of impeachment: one for abuse of power and one for obstruction of Congress.[555] After debate, the House of Representatives impeached Trump on both articles on December 18.[556]
During the trial in January 2020, the House impeachment managers cited evidence to support charges of abuse of power and obstruction of Congress and asserted that Trump's actions were exactly what the founding fathers had in mind when they created the impeachment process.[557]
Trump's lawyers did not deny the facts as presented in the charges, but said that he had not broken any laws or obstructed Congress.[558] They argued that the impeachment was "constitutionally and legally invalid" because he was not charged with a crime and that abuse of power is not an impeachable offense.[558]
On January 31, the Senate voted against allowing subpoenas for witnesses or documents.[559] The impeachment trial was the first in U.S. history without witness testimony.[560]
Trump was acquitted of both charges by the Republican majority. Senator Mitt Romney was the only Republican who voted to convict him on one charge, the abuse of power.[561] Following his acquittal, he fired impeachment witnesses and other political appointees and career officials he deemed insufficiently loyal.[562]
Second impeachment
On January 11, 2021, an article of impeachment charging Trump with incitement of insurrection against the U.S. government was introduced to the House.[563] The House voted 232–197 to impeach him on January 13, making him the first U.S. president to be impeached twice.[564] Ten Republicans voted for the impeachment—the most members of a party ever to vote to impeach a president of their own party.[565]
On February 13, following a five-day Senate trial, Trump was acquitted when the Senate vote fell ten votes short of the two-thirds majority required to convict; seven Republicans joined every Democrat in voting to convict, the most bipartisan support in any Senate impeachment trial of a president or former president.[566][567] Most Republicans voted to acquit him, although some held him responsible but felt the Senate did not have jurisdiction over former presidents (he had left office on January 20; the Senate voted 56–44 that the trial was constitutional).[568]
2020 presidential election
Defeated by Biden
Breaking with precedent, Trump filed to run for a second term within a few hours of assuming the presidency.[569] He held his first reelection rally less than a month after taking office[570] and officially became the Republican nominee in August 2020.[571]
In his first two years in office, Trump's reelection committee reported raising $67.5 million and began 2019 with $19.3 million in cash.[572] By July 2020, his campaign and the Republican Party had raised $1.1 billion and spent $800 million, losing their cash advantage over Biden.[573] The cash shortage forced the campaign to scale back advertising spending.[574]
Trump campaign advertisements focused on crime, claiming that cities would descend into lawlessness if Biden won.[575] He repeatedly misrepresented Biden's positions[576][577] and shifted to appeals to racism.[578]
Starting in the spring of 2020, Trump began to sow doubts about the election, claiming without evidence that the election would be rigged and that the expected widespread use of mail balloting would produce massive election fraud.[579][580] When, in August, the House of Representatives voted for a $25 billion grant to the U.S. Postal Service for the expected surge in mail voting, he blocked funding, saying he wanted to prevent any increase in voting by mail, creating a crisis in the Postal Service.[581] He repeatedly refused to say whether he would accept the results if he lost and commit to a peaceful transition of power.[582][583]
Biden won the election on November 3, receiving 81.3 million votes (51.3 percent) to Trump's 74.2 million (46.8 percent)[584][585] and 306 Electoral College votes to Trump's 232.[586]
Rejection of results
At 2 a.m. the morning after the election, with the results still unclear, Trump declared victory.[587] After Biden was projected the winner days later, Trump baselessly alleged election fraud.[588] He and his allies filed many legal challenges to the results, which were rejected by at least 86 judges in both the state and federal courts, including by federal judges appointed by Trump himself, finding no factual or legal basis.[589][590] His allegations were also refuted by state election officials.[591] On December 11, the U.S. Supreme Court declined to hear a case from the Texas attorney general that asked the court to overturn the election results in four states won by Biden.[592]
Trump withdrew from public activities in the weeks following the election.[593] He initially blocked government officials from cooperating in Biden's presidential transition.[594][595] After three weeks, the administrator of the General Services Administration declared Biden the "apparent winner" of the election, allowing the disbursement of transition resources to his team.[596] Trump still did not formally concede while claiming he recommended the GSA begin transition protocols.[597][598]
The Electoral College formalized Biden's victory on December 14.[586] From November to January, Trump repeatedly sought help to overturn the results, personally pressuring Republican local and state office-holders,[599] Republican state and federal legislators,[600] the Justice Department,[601] and Vice President Pence,[602] urging various actions such as replacing presidential electors, or a request for Georgia officials to "find" votes and announce a "recalculated" result.[600] On February 10, 2021, Georgia prosecutors opened a criminal investigation into Trump's efforts to subvert the election in Georgia.[603]
Trump did not attend Biden's inauguration.[604]
January 6 Capitol attack
In December 2020, Newsweek reported the Pentagon was on red alert, and ranking officers had discussed what to do if Trump declared martial law. The Pentagon responded with quotes from defense leaders that the military has no role in the outcome of elections.[605]
When Trump moved supporters into positions of power at the Pentagon after the November 2020 election, Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Mark Milley and CIA director Gina Haspel became concerned about a possible coup attempt or military action against China or Iran.[606][607] Milley insisted that he should be consulted about any military orders from Trump, including the use of nuclear weapons.[608][609]
On January 6, 2021, while congressional certification of the presidential election results was taking place in the U.S. Capitol, Trump held a noon rally at the Ellipse in Washington, D.C., where he called for the election result to be overturned and urged his supporters to "fight like hell" and "take back our country" by marching to the Capitol.[610][611] Many supporters did, joining a crowd already there. The mob broke into the building, disrupting certification and causing the evacuation of Congress.[612] During the violence, Trump posted messages on Twitter without asking the rioters to disperse. At 6 p.m., he tweeted that the rioters should "go home with love & in peace", calling them "great patriots" and repeating that the election was stolen.[613] After the mob was removed, Congress reconvened and confirmed Biden's win in the early hours of the following morning.[614] According to the Department of Justice, more than 140 police officers were injured, and five people died.[615][616]
In March 2023, Trump collaborated with incarcerated rioters on a song to benefit the prisoners. In June, he said that, if reelected, he would pardon many of them.[617]
First post-presidency (2021–present)
Trump lives at his Mar-a-Lago club, having established an office there as provided for by the Former Presidents Act.[51][618][619] He is entitled to live there legally as a club employee.[620][621]
Trump's false claims concerning the 2020 election were commonly referred to as the "big lie" in the press and by his critics. In May 2021, he and his supporters attempted to co-opt the term, using it to refer to the election itself.[622][623] The Republican Party used his false election narrative to justify the imposition of new voting restrictions in its favor.[623][624] As late as July 2022, he was still pressuring state legislators to overturn the 2020 election.[625]
Unlike other former presidents, Trump continued to dominate his party; he has been described as a modern party boss. He continued fundraising, raising more than twice as much as the Republican Party itself, and profited from fundraisers many Republican candidates held at Mar-a-Lago. Much of his focus was on how elections are run and on ousting election officials who had resisted his attempts to overturn the 2020 election results. In the 2022 midterm elections he endorsed over 200 candidates for various offices, most of whom supported his false claim that the 2020 presidential election was stolen from him.[626][627][628]
Business activities
In February 2021, Trump registered a new company, Trump Media & Technology Group (TMTG), for providing "social networking services" to U.S. customers.[629][630] In March 2024, TMTG merged with special-purpose acquisition company Digital World Acquisition and became a public company.[631] In February 2022, TMTG launched Truth Social, a social media platform.[632] As of March 2023[update], Trump Media, which had taken $8 million from Russia-connected entities, was being investigated by federal prosecutors for possible money laundering.[633][634]
Investigations, criminal indictments and convictions, civil lawsuits
Trump is the only U.S. president or former president to be convicted of a crime and the first major-party candidate to run for president after a felony conviction.[635] As of May 2024, he faces numerous criminal charges and civil cases.[636][637]
FBI investigations
When Trump left the White House in January 2021, he took government materials with him to Mar-a-Lago. By May 2021, the National Archives and Records Administration (NARA) realized that important documents had not been turned over to them and asked his office to locate them. In January 2022, they retrieved 15 boxes of White House records from Mar-a-Lago. NARA later informed the Department of Justice that some of the retrieved documents were classified material.[638] The Justice Department began an investigation[639] and sent Trump a subpoena for additional material.[638] Justice Department officials visited Mar-a-Lago and received some classified documents from his lawyers,[638] one of whom signed a statement affirming that all material marked as classified had been returned.[640]
On August 8, 2022, FBI agents searched Mar-a-Lago to recover government documents and material Trump had taken with him when he left office in violation of the Presidential Records Act,[641][642] reportedly including some related to nuclear weapons.[643] The search warrant indicates an investigation of potential violations of the Espionage Act and obstruction of justice laws.[644] The items taken in the search included 11 sets of classified documents, four of them tagged as "top secret" and one as "top secret/SCI", the highest level of classification.[641][642]
On November 18, 2022, U.S. attorney general Merrick Garland appointed federal prosecutor Jack Smith as a special counsel to oversee the federal criminal investigations into Trump retaining government property at Mar-a-Lago and examining Trump's role in the events leading up to the Capitol attack.[645][646]
Criminal referral by the House January 6 Committee
On December 19, 2022, the United States House Select Committee on the January 6 Attack recommended criminal charges against Trump for obstructing an official proceeding, conspiracy to defraud the United States, and inciting or assisting an insurrection.[647]
State criminal indictments
In December 2022, following a jury trial, the Trump Organization was convicted on 17 counts of criminal tax fraud, conspiracy, and falsifying business records in connection with a tax-fraud scheme stretching over 15 years. In January 2023, the organization was fined the maximum $1.6 million, and its chief financial officer Allen Weisselberg was sentenced to jail and probation after a plea deal. Trump was not personally charged in the case.[648][649]
Later in August, a Fulton County, Georgia, grand jury indicted Trump on 13 charges, including racketeering, for his efforts to subvert the election outcome in Georgia; multiple Trump campaign officials were also indicted.[650][651] He surrendered, was processed at Fulton County Jail, and was released on bail pending trial.[652] He pleaded not guilty.[653] On March 13, 2024, the judge dismissed three of the 13 charges against him.[654]
Federal criminal indictments
In June 2023, following a special counsel investigation, a federal grand jury in Miami indicted Trump on 31 counts of "willfully retaining national defense information" under the Espionage Act, one count of making false statements, and one count each of conspiracy to obstruct justice, withholding government documents, corruptly concealing records, concealing a document in a federal investigation and scheming to conceal their efforts.[655] He pleaded not guilty.[656] A superseding indictment the following month added three charges.[657] The judge assigned to the case, Aileen Cannon, was appointed to the bench by Trump and had previously issued rulings favorable to him in a past civil case, some of which were overturned by an appellate court.[658] She moved slowly on the case, indefinitely postponed the trial in May 2024, and dismissed it on July 15, ruling that the special counsel's appointment was unconstitutional.[659] On August 26, Special Counsel Smith appealed the dismissal.[660]
In August 2023, a Washington, D.C., federal grand jury indicted Trump for his efforts to overturn the 2020 election results. He was charged with conspiring to defraud the U.S., obstruct the certification of the Electoral College vote, and deprive voters of the civil right to have their votes counted, and obstructing an official proceeding.[661] He pleaded not guilty.[662] On November 25, the judge dismissed the case without prejudice after the prosecution filed a motion to dismiss citing Department of Justice policy.[663]
On November 25, the prosecution, citing Department of Justice policy prohibiting the prosecution of a sitting president, requested the dismissal of the D.C. case and Trump's removal as a co-defendant in the classified documents case. The D.C. case was dismissed without prejudice that same day. The next day, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit dropped Trump from the appeal.[664]
Criminal conviction in the 2016 campaign fraud case
During the 2016 presidential election campaign, American Media, Inc. (AMI), publisher of the National Enquirer,[665] and a company set up by Cohen paid Playboy model Karen McDougal and adult film actress Stormy Daniels for keeping silent about their alleged affairs with Trump between 2006 and 2007.[666] Cohen pleaded guilty in 2018 to breaking campaign finance laws, saying he had arranged both payments at Trump's direction to influence the presidential election.[667] Trump denied the affairs and said he was not aware of Cohen's payment to Daniels, but he reimbursed him in 2017.[668][669] Federal prosecutors asserted that Trump had been involved in discussions regarding nondisclosure payments as early as 2014.[670] Court documents showed that the FBI believed he was directly involved in the payment to Daniels, based on calls he had with Cohen in October 2016.[671][672] Federal prosecutors closed the investigation in 2019,[673] but in 2021, the New York State Attorney General's Office and Manhattan District Attorney's Office opened a criminal investigations into his business activities.[674] The Manhattan DA's Office subpoenaed the Trump Organization and AMI for records related to the payments[675] and Trump and the Trump Organization for eight years of tax returns.[676]
In March 2023, a New York grand jury indicted Trump on 34 felony counts of falsifying business records to book the hush money payments to Daniels as business expenses, in an attempt to influence the 2016 election.[677][678][679] The trial began in April 2024, and in May a jury convicted him on all 34 counts.[680] Sentencing is set for November 26, 2024.[681]
Civil judgments
In September 2022, the attorney general of New York filed a civil fraud case against Trump, his three oldest children, and the Trump Organization.[682] During the investigation leading up to the lawsuit, Trump was fined $110,000 for failing to turn over records subpoenaed by the attorney general.[683] In an August 2022 deposition, he invoked his Fifth Amendment right against self-incrimination more than 400 times.[684] The presiding judge ruled in September 2023 that Trump, his adult sons, and the Trump Organization repeatedly committed fraud and ordered their New York business certificates canceled and their business entities sent into receivership for dissolution.[685] In February 2024, the court found him liable, ordered him to pay a penalty of more than $350 million plus interest, for a total exceeding $450 million, and barred him from serving as an officer or director of any New York corporation or legal entity for three years. He said he would appeal the verdict. The judge also ordered the company to be overseen by the monitor appointed by the court in 2023 and an independent director of compliance, and that any "restructuring and potential dissolution" would be the decision of the monitor.[686]
In May 2023, a New York jury in a federal lawsuit brought by journalist E. Jean Carroll in 2022 ("Carroll II") found Trump liable for sexual abuse and defamation and ordered him to pay her $5 million.[687] He asked for a new trial or a reduction of the award, arguing that the jury had not found him liable for rape. He also separately countersued Carroll for defamation. The judge for the two lawsuits ruled against him,[688][689] writing that Carroll's accusation of "rape" is "substantially true".[690] He appealed both decisions.[688][691] In January 2024, the jury in the defamation case brought by Carroll in 2019 ("Carroll I") ordered him to pay Carroll $83.3 million in damages. In March, he posted a $91.6 million bond and appealed.[692]
2024 presidential election
On November 15, 2022, Trump announced his candidacy for the 2024 presidential election and set up a fundraising account.[693][694] In March 2023, the campaign began diverting 10 percent of the donations to his leadership PAC. His campaign had paid $100 million towards his legal bills by March 2024.[695][696]
In December 2023, the Colorado Supreme Court ruled Trump disqualified for the Colorado Republican primary for his role in inciting the January 6, 2021, attack on Congress. In March 2024, the U.S. Supreme Court restored his name to the ballot in a unanimous decision, ruling that Colorado lacks the authority to enforce Section 3 of the 14th Amendment, which bars insurrectionists from holding federal office.[697]
During the campaign, Trump made increasingly violent and authoritarian statements.[699][700][701][702] He also said that he would weaponize the FBI and the Justice Department against his political opponents[703][704] and use the military to go after Democratic politicians and those that do not support his candidacy.[705][706] He used harsher, more dehumanizing anti-immigrant rhetoric than during his presidency.[707][708][709][710] His harsher rhetoric against his political enemies has been described by some historians and scholars as authoritarian, fascist,[c] and unlike anything a political candidate has ever said in American history.[715][706][716] Age and health concerns also arose during the campaign, with several medical experts highlighting an increase in rambling, tangential speech and behavioral disinhibition.[717]
Trump mentioned "rigged election" and "election interference" earlier and more frequently than in the 2016 and 2020 campaigns and refused to commit to accepting the 2024 election results.[718][698] Analysts for The New York Times described this as an intensification of his "heads I win; tails you cheated" rhetorical strategy; the paper said the claim of a rigged election had become the backbone of the campaign.[698]
On July 13, 2024, Trump's ear was grazed by a bullet[719] in an assassination attempt at a campaign rally in Butler Township, Pennsylvania.[720][721] Two days later, the 2024 Republican National Convention nominated him as their presidential candidate, with Senator JD Vance as his running mate.[722] On September 15, 2024, he was targeted in another assassination attempt in Florida.[723]
Trump was elected the 47th president of the United States in November 2024, defeating incumbent vice president Kamala Harris,[724] and making him the second president in U.S. history after Grover Cleveland in 1892 to be elected to a nonconsecutive second term.[725] The Associated Press and BBC News described it as an extraordinary comeback.[726][727] The first Republican to win the popular vote since 2004, as of November 29, Trump did so with 49.83% of the popular vote and a margin of 1.55% over his opponent, the third-smallest since 1888.[728]
Assessments
Public image
Trump was the only president never to reach a 50 percent approval rating in the Gallup poll, which dates to 1938, partially due to a record-high partisan gap in his approval ratings: 88 percent among Republicans and 7 percent among Democrats.[729] His early ratings were unusually stable, ranging between 35 and 49 percent.[730] He finished his term with a rating between 29 and 34 percent—the lowest of any president since modern polling began—and a record-low average of 41 percent throughout his presidency.[729][731] In Gallup's annual poll asking Americans to name the man they admire the most, he placed second to Obama in 2017 and 2018, tied with Obama for first in 2019, and placed first in 2020.[732][733] Since Gallup started conducting the poll in 1946, he was the first elected president not to be named most admired in his first year in office.[734]
A Gallup poll in 134 countries comparing the approval ratings of U.S. leadership between 2016 and 2017 found that Trump led Obama in job approval in only 29 countries, most of them non-democracies;[735] approval of U.S. leadership plummeted among allies and G7 countries.[736] By mid-2020, only 16 percent of international respondents to a 13-nation Pew Research poll expressed confidence in him, lower than China's Xi Jinping and Russia's Vladimir Putin.[737]
Scholarly
In the C-SPAN "Presidential Historians Survey 2021",[738] historians ranked Trump as the fourth-worst president. He rated lowest in the leadership characteristics categories for moral authority and administrative skills.[739][740] The Siena College Research Institute's 2022 survey ranked him 43rd out of 45 presidents. He was ranked near the bottom in all categories except for luck, willingness to take risks, and party leadership, and he ranked last in several categories.[741] In 2018 and 2024, surveys of members of the American Political Science Association ranked him the worst president.[742][743]
Political practice and rhetoric
Beginning with his 2016 campaign, Trump's politics and rhetoric led to the creation of a political movement known as Trumpism.[744] Professor Mary Stuckey identified his rhetoric as using vitriol: "demeaning language, false equivalency, and exclusion".[745] Professor Gary Jacobson found he used fearmongering about immigrants and minorities[746] that other researchers found were essential to his support.[747] His political base has been compared to a cult of personality.[d]
Trump's political positions have been described as right-wing populist.[755][756][757] Politico described them as "eclectic, improvisational and often contradictory".[758] He helped bring far-right fringe ideas and organizations into the mainstream.[759] The alt-right movement coalesced around and supported his candidacy, due in part to its opposition to multiculturalism and immigration.[760][761][762] He has a strong appeal to evangelical Christian voters. He appeals to Christian nationalists,[763] and his rallies take on the symbols, rhetoric and agenda of Christian nationalism.[764]
Link to hate crimes
Research suggests Trump's rhetoric is associated with an increased incidence of hate crimes.[765][766] During his 2016 campaign, he urged or praised physical attacks against protesters or reporters.[767][768] Numerous defendants investigated or prosecuted for violent acts and hate crimes, including participants in the storming of the U.S. Capitol, cited his rhetoric in arguing that they were not culpable or should receive leniency.[769][770] A nationwide review by ABC News in May 2020 identified at least 54 criminal cases from August 2015 to April 2020 in which he was invoked in direct connection with violence or threats of violence mostly by white men and primarily against minorities.[771]
Truthfulness
As a candidate and as president, Trump frequently made false statements in public remarks[775][161] to an extent unprecedented in American politics.[775][776][777] His falsehoods are a distinctive part of his political identity[776] and have been described as firehosing.[778] His false and misleading statements were documented by fact-checkers, including at The Washington Post, which tallied 30,573 false or misleading statements made by him during his first presidency,[772] increasing in frequency over time.[779]
Some of Trump's falsehoods were inconsequential, such as his repeated claim of the "biggest inaugural crowd ever".[780][781] Others had more far-reaching effects, such as his promotion of antimalarial drugs as an unproven treatment for COVID-19,[782][783] causing a U.S. shortage of these drugs and panic-buying in Africa and South Asia.[784][785] Other misinformation, such as misattributing a rise in crime in England and Wales to the "spread of radical Islamic terror", served his domestic political purposes.[786] His attacks on mail-in ballots and other election practices weakened public faith in the integrity of the 2020 presidential election,[787][788] while his disinformation about the pandemic delayed and weakened the national response to it.[789][790][791] Trump habitually does not apologize for his falsehoods.[792]
Until 2018, the media rarely referred to Trump's falsehoods as lies, including when he repeated demonstrably false statements.[793][794][795]
Conspiracy theories
Before and throughout his presidency, Trump promoted numerous conspiracy theories, including Obama birtherism, the Clinton body count conspiracy theory, the conspiracy theory movement QAnon, the Global warming hoax theory, Trump Tower wiretapping allegations, that Osama bin Laden was alive and Obama and Biden had members of Navy SEAL Team 6 killed, and alleged Ukrainian interference in U.S. elections.[796][797][798][799][800] In at least two instances, Trump clarified to press that he believed the conspiracy theory in question.[798]
During and since the 2020 presidential election, Trump promoted various conspiracy theories for his defeat.[801][802][803]
Social media
Trump's social media presence attracted worldwide attention after he joined Twitter in 2009. He tweeted frequently during his 2016 campaign and as president until Twitter banned him after the January 6 attack.[804] He often used Twitter to communicate directly with the public and sideline the press.[805] In June 2017, the White House press secretary said that his tweets were official presidential statements.[806]
After years of criticism for allowing Trump to post misinformation and falsehoods, Twitter began to tag some of his tweets with fact-checks in May 2020.[807] In response, he tweeted that social media platforms "totally silence" conservatives and that he would "strongly regulate, or close them down".[808] In the days after the storming of the Capitol, he was banned from Facebook, Instagram, Twitter and other platforms.[809] The loss of his social media presence diminished his ability to shape events[810][811] and prompted a dramatic decrease in the volume of misinformation shared on Twitter.[812] In February 2022, he launched social media platform Truth Social where he only attracted a fraction of his Twitter following.[813] Elon Musk, after acquiring Twitter, reinstated his Twitter account in November 2022.[814][815] Meta Platforms' two-year ban lapsed in January 2023, allowing him to return to Facebook and Instagram,[816] although in 2024, he continued to call the company an "enemy of the people".[817]
Relationship with the press
Trump sought media attention throughout his career, sustaining a "love-hate" relationship with the press.[818] In the 2016 campaign, he benefited from a record amount of free media coverage, elevating his standing in the Republican primaries.[158] The New York Times writer Amy Chozick wrote in 2018 that his media dominance enthralled the public and created "must-see TV".[819]
As a candidate and as president, Trump frequently accused the press of bias, calling it the "fake news media" and "the enemy of the people".[820] In 2018, journalist Lesley Stahl said that he had privately told her that he intentionally discredited the media "so when you write negative stories about me no one will believe you".[821]
As president, Trump mused about revoking the press credentials of journalists he viewed as critical.[822] His administration moved to revoke the press passes of two White House reporters, which were restored by the courts.[823] The Trump White House held about a hundred formal press briefings in 2017, declining by half during 2018 and to two in 2019.[823]
Trump also deployed the legal system to intimidate the press.[824] The Trump campaign sued The New York Times, The Washington Post, and CNN for defamation in opinion pieces about Russian election interference. All the suits were dismissed.[825] By 2024, he repeatedly voiced support for outlawing political dissent and criticism he considers misleading or challenges his claims to power,[826] and that media companies should be investigated and prosecuted for treason for displaying "bad stories" about him and possibly lose their broadcast licenses if they refuse to name confidential sources.[827]
Notes
- ^ Most notably, the proposed Trans-Pacific Partnership trade agreement (withdrew in 2017), the Paris Agreement on climate change (withdrew in 2020), and the Iran nuclear deal (withdrew in 2018)
- ^ Presidential elections in the U.S. are decided by the Electoral College. Each state names a number of electors equal to its representation in Congress and (in most states) all electors vote for the winner of their state's popular vote.
- ^ Attributed to multiple references:[711][712][713][714]
- ^ Attributed to multiple sources:[748][749][750][751][752][753][754]
References
- ^ Kranish & Fisher 2017, pp. 30, 37.
- ^ Kranish & Fisher 2017, p. v.
- ^ Horowitz, Jason (September 22, 2015). "Donald Trump's Old Queens Neighborhood Contrasts With the Diverse Area Around It". The New York Times. Retrieved November 7, 2018.
- ^ Kranish & Fisher 2017, pp. 33, 38.
- ^ D'Antonio 2015, pp. 40–41.
- ^ Kranish & Fisher 2017, p. 38.
- ^ D'Antonio 2015, p. 43.
- ^ Kranish & Fisher 2017, pp. 45, 47.
- ^ "Two Hundred and Twelfth Commencement for the Conferring of Degrees" (PDF). University of Pennsylvania. May 20, 1968. pp. 19–21. Retrieved March 31, 2023.
- ^ D'Antonio 2015, pp. 69–71.
- ^ Ashford, Grace (February 27, 2019). "Michael Cohen Says Trump Told Him to Threaten Schools Not to Release Grades". The New York Times.
- ^ Blair 2015, p. 300.
- ^ Baron, James (December 12, 1990). "Trumps Get Divorce; Next, Who Gets What?". The New York Times. Retrieved March 5, 2023.
- ^ Hafner, Josh (July 19, 2016). "Get to know Donald's other daughter: Tiffany Trump". USA Today. Retrieved July 10, 2022.
- ^ Kranish & Fisher 2017, p. 266.
- ^ "Donald Trump Fast Facts". CNN. July 2, 2021. Retrieved September 29, 2021.
- ^ Nagourney, Adam (October 30, 2020). "In Trump and Biden, a Choice of Teetotalers for President". The New York Times. Retrieved February 5, 2021.
- ^ Parker, Ashley; Rucker, Philip (October 2, 2018). "Kavanaugh likes beer — but Trump is a teetotaler: 'He doesn't like drinkers.'". The Washington Post. Retrieved February 5, 2021.
- ^ Dangerfield, Katie (January 17, 2018). "Donald Trump sleeps 4–5 hours each night; he's not the only famous 'short sleeper'". Global News. Retrieved February 5, 2021.
- ^ Almond, Douglas; Du, Xinming (December 2020). "Later bedtimes predict President Trump's performance". Economics Letters. 197. doi:10.1016/j.econlet.2020.109590. ISSN 0165-1765. PMC 7518119. PMID 33012904.
- ^ Ballengee, Ryan (July 14, 2018). "Donald Trump says he gets most of his exercise from golf, then uses cart at Turnberry". Golf News Net. Retrieved July 4, 2019.
- ^ Rettner, Rachael (May 14, 2017). "Trump thinks that exercising too much uses up the body's 'finite' energy". The Washington Post. Retrieved September 29, 2021.
- ^ O'Donnell & Rutherford 1991, p. 133.
- ^ a b Marquardt, Alex; Crook, Lawrence III (May 1, 2018). "Exclusive: Bornstein claims Trump dictated the glowing health letter". CNN. Retrieved May 20, 2018.
- ^ Schecter, Anna (May 1, 2018). "Trump doctor Harold Bornstein says bodyguard, lawyer 'raided' his office, took medical files". NBC News. Retrieved June 6, 2019.
- ^ Multiple sources:
- Lopez, German (February 14, 2019). "Donald Trump's long history of racism, from the 1970s to 2019". Vox. Retrieved June 15, 2019.
- Desjardins, Lisa (January 12, 2018). "Every moment in Trump's charged relationship with race". PBS NewsHour. Retrieved January 13, 2018.
- Dawsey, Josh (January 11, 2018). "Trump's history of making offensive comments about nonwhite immigrants". The Washington Post. Retrieved January 11, 2018.
- Weaver, Aubree Eliza (January 12, 2018). "Trump's 'shithole' comment denounced across the globe". Politico. Retrieved January 13, 2018.
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Works cited
Books
- Blair, Gwenda (2015) [2001]. The Trumps: Three Generations That Built an Empire. Simon & Schuster. ISBN 978-1-5011-3936-9.
- D'Antonio, Michael (2015). Never enough : Donald Trump and the pursuit of success. Thomas Dunne Books, St. Martin's Press. ISBN 978-1-250-04238-5.
- Haberman, Maggie (2022). Confidence man: the making of Donald Trump and the breaking of America. Penguin Press. ISBN 978-0-593-29734-6.
- Hassan, Steven (2019). The Cult of Trump. Simon & Schuster. ISBN 978-1-9821-2733-6.
- Kranish, Michael; Fisher, Marc (2017) [2016]. Trump Revealed: The Definitive Biography of the 45th President. Simon & Schuster. ISBN 978-1-5011-5652-6.
- Meacham, Jon (2016). Destiny and Power: The American Odyssey of George Herbert Walker Bush. Random House. p. 326. ISBN 978-0-8129-7947-3.
- O'Donnell, John R.; Rutherford, James (1991). Trumped!. Crossroad Press Trade Edition. ISBN 978-1-946025-26-5.
Journals
- Adams, Kenneth Alan (Spring 2021). "The Trump Death Cult". Journal of Psychohistory. 48 (4): 256–276. ISSN 0145-3378. Retrieved November 6, 2024.
- Diamond, Michael J. (February 22, 2023). "Perverted Containment: Trumpism, Cult Creation, and the Rise of Destructive American Populism". Psychoanalytic Inquiry. 43 (2): 96–109. doi:10.1080/07351690.2023.2163147.
- Edwards, Jason A. (2018). "Make America Great Again: Donald Trump and Redefining the U.S. Role in the World". Communication Quarterly. 66 (2): 176. doi:10.1080/01463373.2018.1438485.
- Franks, Andrew S.; Hesami, Farhang (September 18, 2021). "Seeking Evidence of The MAGA Cult and Trump Derangement Syndrome: An Examination of (A)symmetric Political Bias". Societies. 11 (3): 113. doi:10.3390/soc11030113.
- Holshue, Michelle L.; DeBolt, Chas; Lindquist, Scott; Lofy, Kathy H.; Wiesman, John; Bruce, Hollianne; Spitters, Christopher; Ericson, Keith; Wilkerson, Sara; Tural, Ahmet; Diaz, George (March 5, 2020). "First Case of 2019 Novel Coronavirus in the United States". The New England Journal of Medicine. 382 (10): 929–936. doi:10.1056/NEJMoa2001191. PMC 7092802. PMID 32004427.
- Jacobson, Gary C. (October 24, 2020). "Donald Trump and the Parties: Impeachment, Pandemic, Protest, and Electoral Politics in 2020". Presidential Studies Quarterly. 50 (4): 762–795. doi:10.1111/psq.12682. ISSN 0360-4918.
- Johnson, Kevin R. (2017a). "Immigration and civil rights in the Trump administration: Law and policy making by executive order". Santa Clara Law Review. 57 (3): 611–665.
- Johnson, Kevin R.; Cuison-Villazor, Rose (May 2, 2019). "The Trump Administration and the War on Immigration Diversity". Wake Forest Law Review. 54 (2): 575–616.
- Mason, Liliana; Wronski, Julie; Kane, John V. (2021). "Activating Animus: The Uniquely Social Roots of Trump Support". American Political Science Review. 115 (4): 1508–1516. doi:10.1017/S0003055421000563.
- McGurk, Brett (January 22, 2020). "The Cost of an Incoherent Foreign Policy: Trump's Iran Imbroglio Undermines U.S. Priorities Everywhere Else". Foreign Affairs.
- Lajevardi, Nazita; Oskooii, Kassra A. R. (2018). "Old-Fashioned Racism, Contemporary Islamophobia, and the Isolation of Muslim Americans in the Age of Trump". Journal of Race, Ethnicity, and Politics. 3 (1): 112–152. doi:10.1017/rep.2017.37.
- Perry, Samuel L.; Whitehead, Andrew L.; Grubbs, Joshua B. (April 21, 2021). "The Devil That You Know: Christian Nationalism and Intent to Change One's Voting Behavior For or Against Trump in 2020". Politics and Religion. 15 (2): 229–246. doi:10.1017/S175504832100002X. hdl:11244/334967.
- Reyes, Antonio (May 4, 2020). "I, Trump The cult of personality, anti-intellectualism and the Post-Truth era". Journal of Language and Politics. 19 (6): 869–892. doi:10.1075/jlp.20002.rey. ISSN 1569-2159.
- Rothe, Dawn L.; Collins, Victoria E. (November 17, 2019). "Turning Back the Clock? Violence against Women and the Trump Administration". Victims & Offenders. 14 (8): 965–978. doi:10.1080/15564886.2019.1671284.
- Stuckey, Mary E. (February 20, 2020). "'The Power of the Presidency to Hurt': The Indecorous Rhetoric of Donald J. Trump and the Rhetorical Norms of Democracy". Presidential Studies Quarterly. 50 (2): 366–391. doi:10.1111/psq.12641.
- Sundahl, Anne-Mette Holmgård (May 4, 2022). "Personality Cult or a Mere Matter of Popularity?". International Journal of Politics, Culture, and Society. 36 (4): 431–458. doi:10.1007/s10767-022-09423-0. PMC 9066393. PMID 35528318.
External links
- Archive of Donald Trump's tweets
- Appearances on C-SPAN
- Donald Trump at IMDb
- Donald Trump on the Internet Archive
- Biography of Donald Trump from The White House website (courtesy of the White House Historical Association)
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