Donald Trump makes a healing pitch with conciliatory notes on Kansas shooting, immigration
WASHINGTON: A softer, gentler, more Presidential Donald
Trump emerged on Capitol Hill on Tuesday, seeking to heal a
bitterly divided America on issues from racism to immigration while still
projecting a muscular United States bound for glory in his time at the White
House.
In a nearly hour-long speech to the joint session of the US Congress+ ,
the 45th President, just five-weeks-old in office, finally embraced the
conciliatory aspect of the job, by telling Americans of all race, colour, and
creed that "We are one people, with one destiny."
In doing so, Trump also offered direct denunciation of the threats and
vandalism against the Jewish community in the US and the shooting in
Kansas+ that claimed the life of an engineer from India. The
incidents, he said, "remind us that while we may be a nation divided on
policies, we are a country that stands united in condemning hate and evil in
all of its very ugly forms."
Trump had been panned for not directly condemning the attack against minorities
and immigrants, specifically the Kansas incident, even though he has frequently
railed against attacks by immigrants of minority stock.
The US President also refined his position on immigration+ ,
calling for a merit-based entry to the United States that was prevalent before
the 1960s, when family-based and low-skilled immigration became prevalent.
"Switching away from this current system of lower-skilled immigration, and
instead adopting a merit-based system, we will have so many more benefits. It
will save countless dollars, raise workers' wages, and help struggling
families, including immigrant families, enter the middle class. And they will
do it quickly and they will be very, very happy indeed," Trump said.
The President's position, which has to be legislated into effect by Congress,
will effectively regulate emigration from across the world into the US of the
wealthy and the high-skilled (and potentially high earning) while keeping out
"your poor,...your huddled masses yearning to breathe free...the wretched
refuse of your teeming shore," that is enshrined on the Statue of Liberty.
But Trump was unapologetic about his stand, insisting that "it is a basic
principle that those seeking to enter a country ought to be able to support
themselves financially." He said the current, "outdated system
depresses wages for our poorest workers and puts great pressure on
taxpayers," and pointed to nations like Canada and Australia that have a
merit-based system.
The US President also implicitly connected immigration to extremism and
terrorism, urging those given the "high honor of admission to the United
States should support this country and love its people and its values,"
and warning, "We cannot allow a beachhead of terrorism to form inside of
America. We cannot allow our nation to become a sanctuary for extremists."
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Trump dealt only broadly with foreign policy issues while calling for a
"direct, robust and meaningful engagement with the world" in which
the American leadership is "based on vital security interests that we
share with our allies all across the globe."
Despite his frequent dissing of Nato, he said the US
strongly supports the organization (as long as the partners meet their
financial obligations), and pledged that "our allies will find that
America is once again ready to lead."
Even the President's unremitting critics acknowledged that
this was a different Trump from the one whose incendiary words inflamed US
politics for a year during the presidential campaign, and continued into the
two-month transition and a month of the Presidency itself.
As Trump urged, that "time for small thinking is over.
The time for trivial fights is behind us," even the New York Times, which
has been systematically eviscerating Trump (amid his denunciation of its
failings) noted that "at precisely the moment he needed to project
sobriety, Mr. Trump delivered the most presidential speech he has ever
given." And from the Washington Post: "This may have been the best
speech Trump has given since he entered politics in June 2015, and people rooting
for his imminent demise may be disappointed."
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