The first weeks of President Trump in the White House have included government groups fighting to discover that his financing and Wall Street investors unleashed through the commercial wars that seemed to start and then ended up in an instant.
But in spite of everything, the mood among those of the right -wing media has been exlovio.
“I don't have enough time for all winners,” Dan Bongino, a former Trump supporter and popular right -wing podcaster, on his program on Tuesday, on his program. “It's a good problem having.”
A choir of right -wing people and media figures has spent Trump's first two weeks in office responding to each of their movements with a unified sense of support and even astonishment. The triumphal tone could reflect an important advantage for Trump during his second presidential term: in the eyes of the right -wing media, he cannot do anything wrong.
Many of these figures of the right -wing media have long been identified as allies of Mr. Trump, avoiding traditional media practices to avoid the appearance of political bias.
Trump has achieved several achievements in his short time in the White House. He has signed a large number of executive orders aimed at remodeling Washington, and all his cabinet selections that faced a vote before Congress was confirmed.
But there have also been setbacks. The Trump administration abruptly fridge billion dollars in government funds only to see two federal judges block the order. The administration rescinded the plan two days later. A federal judge also blocked an executive order that aimed to finish the so -called birth citizenship.
Even so, the idea of winning without stop is being driven by the White House itself. Karoline Leavitt, the White House Press Secretary, said in a Fox News interview that “there are so much winner of Trump's White House that the main legacy media cannot be kept up to date.”
It is not just the right -wing media to point out Trump's successes. The head of an Axios email bulletin highlighted Tuesday “Trump's winning streak.”
But for the multitude of right -wing personalities and the influencers of social networks that have been completely aligned behind him and his agenda, Trump's victories are absolute. Even chaos and confusion can be a victory in itself, a sign of interruption in the capital of the nation.
“Literally, the only thing that the left has is that Trump has failed to reduce egg prices in 6 days, because he has done almost everything else,” Charlie Kirk, a Trump ally and Turning Point USA head, a conservative group, a conservative group Focused on youth, he wrote in x. “That is called winning.”
Users on social networks distributed carefully selected lists of Mr. Trump's actions since he entered the White House, mixing notable victories along with more doubtful claims.
An outstanding right account in x, which has more than 3.5 million followers, shared a list of 16 apparent victories. He affirmed that water deposits in California “filled” depending on Mr. Trump's order, after a misleading statement that the state's water management policy led to dry hydrants during the forest fires of Los Angeles. (Mr. Trump's administration published more than one billion gallons of two dams, but none of that will reach Los Angeles). He also declared that the financing for the United States Agency for International Development was “canceled.” (It wasn'talthough the Trump administration ordered that almost all its employees be permission).
Similar lists detailed achievements ranging from exaggerated to the fantastic, including that Trump had “made peace” between Israel and Hamas. (A Fire's High Agreement was reached at the end of President Joseph R. Biden Jr. with the participation of Mr. Trump, although deep hostilities between Israel and Hamas remain).
The power of Pro-Trump messaging was especially clear during Mr. Trump's threat to install 25 percent tariffs in Canada and Mexico. In terms of Monday, the stock market had fallen sharply, Canada had promised retaliation rates and Wall Street experts attended to television Underline that, historically, no one wins in a commercial war.
Before the end of the day, Trump had announced a 30 -day pause on the rates.
If it was a victory for Mr. Trump or did not seem to rest in the viewer's eye. Canada and Mexico announced plans on Monday that, to some extent, they were already announced or were within the limits of previous commitments. Other plans, including a new proposed drug addict for Canada, had not yet entered into force, and its impact on the vague priorities of Mr. Trump, which exceeds the Fentanyl flow, among others, it had not been clear.
Many personalities in the right -wing media saw a clearer triumph for Trump in the exchange. The “War Room” podcast described him as a “total victory” and a “truly historical day.” Tim Pool, a right -wing podcast, said Trump had “won” a commercial war that had not yet begun. Even Ben Shapiro, the right -wing podcaster who has long criticized tariffs as expensive taxes, said Mr. Trump's plan combined with other tax cuts would be “compensation that is worth it.”
The reliably conservative opinion page of the Wall Street Journal noticed the apparent unit of the right media.
“None of this means that rates are a game of genius power.” The editorial board wrote“As Trump Media choir boast.”
(Tagstotranslate) Policy and Government of the United States