O mundo repercute Trump.
Neste
sábado, os jornais internacionais estão repercutindo o discurso de posse de
Donald Trump e suas reverberações ao redor do mundo.
As
primeiras impressões são de receio da diplomacia internacional, com as maiores
autoridades, das principais economias do mundo, estarrecidas com o tom adotado
no discurso. Muitos acreditavam que, após assumir a presidência, Trump poderia
adotar um tom mais diplomático e ameno. Contudo, tanto seu discurso, como as
primeiras sinalizações de suas prioridades de governo, apenas reforçam o que
foi apresentando em sua campanha eleitoral. Uma série de manifestações contra o
novo presidente norte americano foram desencadeadas nos EUA e ao redor do
mundo.
Neste
inicio de final de semana, Trump já assinou “executive orders” que visam alterar o Obamacare, além de congelar o
máximo possível novas regulamentações das agências governamentais. Segundo o
FT:
Donald Trump launched a promised assault
on “burdens” imposed by government within hours of becoming US president on
Friday by moving to weaken rules tied to Obamacare and halting the introduction
of any new regulations. Between the end of a daytime inaugural parade and the
start of evening balls, the Trump administration took its first major policy
moves by ordering government agencies to do all they could within the law to
freeze any fresh red tape.
O WSJ
fez um excelente resumo em torno dos principas temas colocados na página
oficial da Casa Branca:
Each new item on the White House site contains a blueprint of how
President Trump plans to tackle different issues. Many of the items appear to
be agendas the White House plans to pursue on its own authority, but there are
also calls for congressional cooperation. For example, it says the Trump
administration will submit a plan to Congress to rebuild the military, a
recognition they will need to authorize such an expansion of spending.
On energy policy, it says Mr. Trump will eliminate the Climate Action
Plan put in place by the Obama administration in 2013. It also says the Trump
administration will eliminate the “Waters of the United States” rule, a
controversial 2015 policy that expanded waterways that are subject to
protection by the Environmental Protection Agency.
“Lifting these restrictions
will greatly help American workers, increasing wages by more than $30 billion
over the next 7 years,” the Trump White House’s website said.
It also called for pushing
for more shale oil and gas development, and said it would use the revenues from
this development to “rebuild our roads, schools, bridges and public
infrastructure.”
On foreign policy, the new website says “defeating ISIS and other
radical Islamic terror groups will be our highest priority,” referring to the
Islamic State terror network. This could be seen as a break from the Obama
administration’s foreign-policy approach, which never elevated ISIS to the top
of the agenda. Rather, senior Obama administration officials had targeted ISIS
as the top terror threat, but much of its focus and strategy was aimed at
constraining threats posed by Russia and China.
The website promises to grow the size of the U.S. military, saying the Navy and
Air Force are much smaller than they have been historically. This includes
developing “a state-of-the-art missile defense system” that it says will
protect against threats from Iran and North Korea.
On trade policy, it says Mr. Trump will begin by “withdrawing from the
Trans-Pacific Partnership and making certain that any new trade deals are in
the interests of American workers.” He will renegotiate the North American Free
Trade Agreement, and if Mexico and Canada won’t renegotiate that deal, Mr.
Trump “will give notice of the United States’ intent to withdraw” from that
agreement.
On economic policy, the website says Mr. Trump has a plant to return
the U.S. to 4% annual growth and create 25 million jobs over 10 years, or
roughly 2.5 million a year. He aims to push a tax plan that cuts rates for
every income bracket and lower the U.S. corporate tax rate. The website doesn’t
say whether this will be done in a way that aims to keep the deficit flat,
something that policy officials and lawmakers often clash about.
Similarly, the website says
Mr. Trump has proposed a “moratorium” on new federal regulations. It doesn’t
say, however, whether that campaign promise will become one of his first
executive actions.
For law enforcement, many of his proposals appear to come directly from
his campaign platform. These include the creation of a wall on the Mexico
border that the website says will “stop illegal immigration” and “stop the
gangs and the violence” and “stop the drugs from pouring into our communities.”
Also, more broadly, the website says “enforcing our border laws” will stem “the
tide of lawlessness associated with illegal immigration.”
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