Trump touts tax cut as major feat in pitch for mid-term polls
WASHINGTON: US President Donald Trump tweeted right to the end of the year on Sunday, boasting of his accomplishments in his turbulent first year in office and throwing down the gauntlet for the mid-term elections.
He highlighted his tax cut and a surging stock market in a series of New Year’s Eve tweets that seemed to set the table for the new year’s fight for control of the Congress.
“Why would smart voters want to put Democrats in Congress in 2018 election when their policies will totally kill the great wealth created during the months since the election,” he said.
Trump rang in the new year at his Mar-a-Lago club in Palm Beach, Florida, before returning to Washington.
He goes into 2018 with the lowest approval ratings of any modern first-year US president, after a year in which he shattered political expectations, strained long-standing alliances and courted controversy on race and immigration.
In a tweet late on Thursday, Trump addressed criticism of his often incendiary use of social media with an attack on a favorite target, the press.
“I use Social Media not because I like to, but because it is the only way to fight a VERY dishonest and unfair ‘press,’ now often referred to as Fake News Media.
“Phony and non-existent ‘sources’ are being used more often than ever. Many stories & reports a pure fiction!” Still unresolved is a deepening federal probe into whether Trump campaign aides and associates colluded with a covert Russian effort to sway the 2016 US presidential election in the Republican’s favor.
But Trump, who told the New York Times this week the probe makes “the country look very bad,” stuck to the good economic news on Sunday.
“If the Dems (Crooked Hillary) got elected, your stocks would be down 50% from values on Election Day. Now they have a great future - and just beginning!” he said in one of his tweets Sunday.
Despite passage of a major tax overhaul before Christmas and stock markets ending the year at record highs, Republicans have been vulnerable in recent elections.
Republicans now hold a slender one-seat majority in the US Senate after a Trump-endorsed candidate -- accused of preying on young girls -- lost a special election in red state Alabama.
Published in Dawn, January 1st, 2018