Commentary

Thayer: President Trump’s first year back in the Oval is action, not apologies

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By Gregory M. Thayer 

By any fair measure, President Donald Trump’s first year back in office has been defined by speed, clarity of purpose, bold, and a willingness to act where others hesitated. Whether one agrees with every decision or not, the contrast with recent years is unmistakable: the federal government is no longer drifting. It is moving — decisively.

From day one, the administration made clear that the priorities were economic growth, border security, government efficiency, and American sovereignty. Unlike administrations that spend their first year studying problems, this one focused on executing solutions.

Start with the economy. Making the 2017 tax cuts permanent removed years of uncertainty hanging over families and businesses. Expanded deductions for seniors and working families put more money directly into household budgets, while incentives for domestic investment helped reignite manufacturing growth. Job creation rebounded, capital spending increased, and consumer confidence stabilized — all signals of an economy responding to predictability rather than bureaucracy. Don’t for the One, Big Beautiful Bill with no tax on tips, overtime, and social security income, and more.

On immigration, the administration delivered what voters had been promised for years: enforcement. By ending catch-and-release policies, tightening asylum standards, and prioritizing the removal of violent offenders, the federal government reasserted control of the border. Illegal crossings fell sharply, relieving pressure on border communities and restoring credibility to the nation’s immigration system. One need not oppose immigration to recognize that a system without enforcement is not a system at all.

Perhaps the most underappreciated achievement has been the aggressive push to reform the federal government itself. Through executive action and agency restructuring, the administration moved to reduce regulatory sprawl, curb wasteful spending, and demand accountability from a permanent bureaucracy long insulated from consequences. The creation of new efficiency mechanisms signaled a clear message: government exists to serve the public, not itself.

With foreign policy, the president returned to a posture of unapologetic national interest. Sanctions were enforced, trade rules were defended, and allies were reminded that partnership requires reciprocity. While critics labeled this approach confrontational, supporters saw something else — a United States willing to negotiate from strength rather than habit. America First, which means Americans First!

Of course, controversy followed. It always does when power is exercised rather than avoided. Court challenges, protests, and sharp media criticism accompanied many of these actions. But controversy is not failure. In many cases, it is evidence that long-standing assumptions are finally being questioned.

After a year back in the Oval, the central takeaway is simple: this administration chose action over paralysis. Voters did not elect a caretaker; they elected a solid leader. Whether history ultimately applauds every decision is for the future to decide. But in its first year, the Trump administration undeniably delivered what it promised — movement, direction, strength, and a government once again willing to use its power and confidence.

In an era defined by hesitation, that alone is a notable accomplishment.


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Categories: Commentary

2 replies »

  1. Good article, Greg. Thank you.

    I, too, appreciate and applaud the courage of President Trump and his administration’s decisive action on behalf of our nation. He inherited an absolutely disgusting mess from the previous administration, and has stood against the vicious attacks, TDS, and lawfare against him for ten years. He has never stopped fighting for the American people, and really for the good of the whole world.

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