Trump ran an ‘America first’ campaign. Now he views presidency as ‘worldwide’
WASHINGTONΒ βΒ On the campaign trail, Donald Trump was unapologetic about putting America first. He promised to secure the nationβs borders, strengthen the domestic workforce and be tough on countries he thought were taking advantage of the United States.
Now, 10 months into his second term, the president is facing backlash from some conservatives who say he is too focused on matters abroad, whether itβs seeking regime change in Venezuela, brokering peace deals in Ukraine and Gaza or extending a $20-billion currency swap for Argentina. The criticism has grown in recent days after Trump expressed support for granting more visas to foreign students and skilled immigrant workers.
The cracks in the MAGA movement, which have been more pronounced in recent weeks, underscore how Trumpβs once impenetrable political base is wavering as the president appears to embrace a more global approach to governing.
βI have to view the presidency as a worldwide situation, not locally,β Trump said this week when asked to address the criticism at an Oval Office event. βWe could have a world thatβs on fire where wars come to our shores very easily if you had a bad president.β
For backers of Trumpβs MAGA movement, the conflict is forcing some to weigh loyalty to an βAmerica firstβ ideology over a president they have long supported and who, in some cases, inspired them to get involved in the political process.
βI am against foreign aid, foreign wars, and sending a single dollar to foreign countries,β Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-Ga.), who in recent weeks has become more critical of Trumpβs policies, said in a social media post Wednesday. βI am America First and America Only. This is my way and there is no other way to be.β
Beyond America-first concerns, some Trump supporters are frustrated with him for resisting the disclosures about the late convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein and his network of powerful friends β including Trump. A group of Republicans in the House, for instance, helped lead an effort to force a vote to demand further disclosures on the Epstein files from the Justice Department.
βWhen they are protecting pedophiles, when they are blowing our budget, when they are starting wars overseas, Iβm sorry, I canβt go along with that,β Rep. Thomas Massie (R-Ky.) said in a CNN interview. βAnd back home, people agree with me. They understand, even the most ardent Trump supporters understand.β
When asked to respond to the criticism Trump has faced in recent weeks, the White House said the president was focused on implementing βeconomic policies that are cutting costs, raising real wages, and securing trillions in investments to make and hire in America.β
Mike Madrid, a βnever Trumpβ Republican consultant, believes the Epstein scandal has sped up a Republican backlash that has been brewing as a result of Trump deviating from his campaign promises.
βThey are turning on him, and itβs a sign of the inviolable trust being gone,β Madrid said.
The MAGA movement was not led by a policy ideology, but rather βfealty to the leader,β Madrid said. Once the trust in Trump fades, βeverything is gone.β
Criticism of Trump goes mainstream
The intraparty tension also has played out on conservative and mainstream news outlets, where the president has been challenged on his policies.
In a recent Fox News interview with Laura Ingraham, Trump was pressed on a plan to give student visas to hundreds of thousands of Chinese students, a move that would mark a departure from actions taken by his administration this year to crack down on foreign students.
βI think it is good to have outside countries,β Trump said. βLook, I want to be able to get along with the world.β
In that same interview, Trump said he supports giving H-1B visas to skilled foreign workers because the U.S. doesnβt have workers with βcertain talents.β
βYou canβt take people off an unemployment line and say, βIβm going to put you into a factory where weβre going to make missiles,ββ Trump argued.
Trump in September imposed a $100,000 fee for H-1B visas for skilled workers, a move that led to confusion among businesses, immigration lawyers and H-1B visa holders. Before Trumpβs order, the visa program had exposed a rift between the presidentβs supporters in the technology industry, which relies on the program, and immigration hard-liners who want to see the U.S. invest in an American workforce.
A day after Trump expressed support for the visa program, Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem added fuel to the immigration debate by saying the administration is fast-tracking immigrantsβ pathway to citizenship.
βMore people are becoming naturalized under this administration than ever before,β Noem told Fox News this week.
Laura Loomer, a far-right activist and close ally of Trump, said the administrationβs position was βdisappointing.β
βHow is that a good thing? We are supposed to be kicking foreigners out, not letting them stay,β Loomer said.
Polling adds on the heat
As polling shows Americans are growing frustrated with the economy, some conservatives increasingly blame Trump for not doing enough to create more jobs and lower the cost of living.
Greene, the Georgia Republican, said on βThe Sean Spicer Showβ Thursday that Trump and his administration are βgaslightingβ people when they say prices are going down.
βItβs actually infuriating people because people know what theyβre paying at the grocery store,β she said, while urging Republicans to βshow we are in the trenches with themβ rather than denying their experience.
While Trump has maintained that the economy is strong, administration officials have begun talking about pushing new economic policies. White House economic advisor Kevin Hassett said this week that the administration would be working to provide consumers with more purchasing power, saying that βweβre going to fix it right away.β
βWe understand that people understand, as people look at their pocketbooks to go to the grocery store, that thereβs still work to do,β Hassett said.
The acknowledgment comes after this monthβs elections in key states β in which Republicans were soundly defeated β made clear that rising prices were top of mind for many Americans. The results also showed Latino voters were turning away from the GOP amid growing concerns about the economy.
As Republicans try to refocus on addressing affordability, Trump has continued to blame the economic problems on former President Biden.
βCost, and INFLATION, were higher under the Sleepy Joe Biden administration, than they are now,β Trump said in a social media post Friday. He insisted that under his administration costs are βtumbling down.β