Birthplace: Queens, New York.
Political Party: Republicans.
Previous jobs: Real estate developer, head of the Trump Organization, head of NBC
apprentice. Family: Trump and his wife Melania married in 2005 and have a 13-year-old son named Barron. Trump also has four children – Donald Trump Jr., Ivanka, Eric and Tiffany from his previous marriages to Ivan Trump and Marla Maples. Trump has nine grandchildren.
Donald Trump’s Direct Opponent: Donald Trump should be in the primary, but his primary is currently unclear. While some Republicans crave alternatives, Trump has turned the tide in his favour and managed to rally the GOP behind him. An Insider poll earlier this year found that 33 per cent of people who think at least somewhat conservatively support the president thoroughly. Don’t think about voting for a challenger; 24% would prefer to keep a qualified Republican candidate, and 18% would be open to other Republican candidates.
Donald Trump’s Political Position:
1. Health care
2. The rump supported the Affordable Care Act, known as Obamacare, and replaced it with a free market system.
3. Republicans tried to pass a new health care bill after Trump took office, but the proposal failed in the Senate after unanimous opposition from Democrats and some Republicans.
4. According to RAN and the company, Trump’s proposed health care reforms could result in 2018 Medicare cuts of 15 million to 25 million and a slight increase in the federal deficit, depending on the specific components of implementation:
On immigration:
1. Immigration is a signature issue for Trump, who has long pushed for a wall on the U.S.’s southern border with Mexico.
2. The Trump administration has also taken steps to reduce the number of legal asylum seekers allowed into the country.
3. Trump has also called for closing the U.S.-Mexico border. Still, he is under pressure from administration officials who say the U.S. cannot legally close such a border except for national security reasons.
On climate change:
1. Trump pulled the U.S. out of the landmark Paris climate accord that the Obama administration dominated in 2015.
2. The Trump administration has also put intense pressure on the Environmental Protection Agency to roll back environmental and health regulations it claims are putting pressure on the manufacturing and fossil fuel industries.
3. Regarding campaign finance/electoral reform:
4. In 2016, Trump criticized his Republican opponents for being funded by special interests and wealthy donors.
5. He also said during the debate that campaign finance laws were broken in the U.S.
6. In September 2018, Trump signed a bill to make Senate campaign contributions more transparent.
7. Trump and his former lawyer, Michael Cohen, are at the centre of a high-profile federal criminal investigation into whether his campaign violated campaign law because Cohen paid two men before Election Day in 2016. Women in exchange for their silence on the matter. With Trump.
About abortions:
1. Trump has previously said he supports abortion but took a pro-life stance after launching his first presidential campaign.
2. Trump opposes abortions, except in cases of rape, s-e-x-u-a-l harassment and threats to the mother’s health.
3. Trump crafted bogus legislation to prevent Planned Parenthood clinics that provide abortion services or referrals from receiving $6.286 billion in federal Title X funding.
4. The U.S. threatened to veto a U.N. Security Council resolution in April aimed at combating battlefield rape over references to s-e-x-u-a-l and reproductive health. The United Nations later removed the language to ease the U.S.’s strict abortion ban and passed a resolution.
Regarding LGBTQ rights:
1. The Trump administration bans transgender troops from serving in the U.S. military.
2. The Trump administration has weakened civil rights protections that prevent businesses and other entities from discriminating on the basis of gender or s-e-x-ual orientation.
3. Other federal agencies, such as the Department of Education and the Department of Health and Human Services, have taken steps to make it more difficult for LGBTQ people to access quality education and safe health care.
Educate:
1. Trump is ready to repeal Common Core.
2. He supports charter schools, saying in April, “I don’t call it (a charter) a test; it’s not just a test.” Trump said education spending is a priority. But his proposed 2018 budget cut education funding by about 13 per cent.
On criminal justice reform: Trump is running for president for peace
Go ahead and show your support for the death penalty for drug dealers
ANYWAY, Trump signs First Step Act, a bipartisan bill with mandatory minimums
Hope for prevention and broader prisoner education, vocational training and rehabilitation
Create a program. Kim Kardashian West at an Oval Office meeting last year
After urging the president to look into Johnson’s case
Trump rejects sentencing of first-time non-violent drug offender Alice Johnson
Trump has said he will support legislation that would allow states to legalize marijuana
Let you decide if you want to do that.