WASHINGTON, United States
United States President, Donald Trump has celebrated the 100th day of his second term in office with a campaign-style speech, touting his achievements and targeting political foes.
Hailing what he called a
"revolution of common sense", he told a crowd of supporters in
Michigan that he was using his presidency to deliver "profound
change".
The Republican mocked his
Democratic predecessor, Joe Biden, and aimed fresh criticism at the US Federal
Reserve's chairman, while dismissing polls that show his own popularity
slipping.
Trump has delivered a dramatic
fall in the number of migrants crossing illegally into the US, but the economy
is a potential political vulnerability as he wages a global trade war.
"We've just gotten
started, you haven't seen anything yet," Trump told the crowd on Tuesday
in a suburb of Detroit.
Speaking at the hub of
America's automative industry, Trump said car firms were "lining up"
to open new manufacturing plants in the Midwestern state.
Earlier in the day he softened
a key element of his economic plan - tariffs on the import of foreign cars and
car parts - after US car-makers warned of the danger of rising prices.
At his rally, Trump also said
opinion polls indicating his popularity had fallen were "fake".
According to Gallup, Trump is
the only post-World War Two president to have less than half the public's
support after 100 days in office, with an approval rating of 44%.
But the majority of Republican
voters still firmly back the president. And the rival Democratic Party is also
struggling in polling.
The Democratic National
Committee (DNC) said Trump's first 100 days were a "colossal
failure".
"Trump is to blame for
the fact that life is more expensive, it's harder to retire, and a 'Trump
recession' is at our doorstep," the DNC said.
Trump conducted his own
informal poll in Tuesday's remarks, asking the crowd for their favourite Biden
nicknames. He also mocked his Democratic predecessor's mental agility and even
how he appears in a swim suit, while continuing to insist he was the real
victor of the 2020 election, which he lost.
Other targets of his ire
included Jerome Powell, head of the US central bank, whom the president said
was not doing a good job.
Trump touted progress on
immigration – encounters at the southern border have plummeted to just over
7,000, down from 140,000 in March of last year.
The White House also said
almost 65,700 immigrants had been deported in his term so far, although that is
a slower pace than in the last fiscal year when US authorities deported more
than 270,000.
Part of the way through his
speech Trump screened a video of deportees being expelled from the US and sent
to a mega-prison in El Salvador.
His immigration crackdown has
faced a flurry of legal challenges, as has his effort to end the automatic
granting of citizenship to anyone born on US soil.
During Tuesday's speech he
insisted egg prices had declined 87%, a claim contradicted by the latest
government price figures.
Inflation, energy prices and mortgage rates have fallen since Trump took office, although unemployment has risen slightly, consumer sentiment has sagged and the stock market was plunged into turmoil by the tariffs.
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