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JEFFREY ENGEL
jaengel@mail.smu.eduOn what a President’s typical first day holds in store, and how Trump’s might be different…
- “A president’s first day in office is typically filled with welcomes from around the world and from his own administration. He might field congratulatory calls from global leaders, friends and potential foes alike, each eager to start a new relationship with the new commander in chief out on the best footing possible. So too leaders from his own government, and from Congress, who will take the time to formally address ‘Mr. President’ so he knows what it sounds like coming from their voice. It is a day for ceremony and setting a tone, and for signing pre-determined executive orders rescinding his predecessor’s or fulfilling campaign promises, but not typically for big decisions.”
On how the national situation Trump inherits compares to that of past presidents…
- “Historians will likely note that a man elected president in 2016 on the basis of lamenting America’s fate inherited one of the strongest positions of any American leader in history. Barack Obama took over during the worst economic crisis since the Great Depression and with two major wars to oversee. He hands his successor a nation near full employment, a record of economic growth, and no large-scale military conflicts. Trump will be hard pressed to improve on Obama’s overall record, but then again, it is clear that Trump’s supporters were never impressed by the real story of Obama’s presidency anyway.”
On what likely will, and wont, be accomplished in Trump’s first 100 days…
- “I expect the new administration, and more importantly the new GOP congress, will in its first 100 days repeal Obamacare, but not offer a real substitute; repeal environmental and worker’s regulations; restrict funding for planned parenthood; and walk back as many of the previous administration’s executive orders as they can, in particular those covering social issues and the LGBTQ community. It will not be 100 days of advance. In the promise of making American great again, it will be 100 days of retreat.”
Engel is director of the SMU Center for Presidential History
Books published:
- When Life Strikes the White House: Death, Scandal, Sickness and Personal Tragedies in the Oval Office, Jeffrey A. Engel and Thomas J. Knock, eds. New York: Oxford University Press, 2017
- Into the Desert: Reflections on the Gulf War, Jeffrey A. Engel, ed. New York: Oxford University Press, 2012
- Rethinking Leadership and “Whole of Government” National Security Reform, with Joseph R. Cerami. Carlisle, Pennsylvania: Strategic Studies Institute, U.S. Army War College, 2010
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