Given his candidacy, there is a lot of speculation throughout the country about what life would be like if Donald Trump were to run for president once more.

extensive eviction? On a political level, revenge? Global peace? A new heyday altogether? Given his candidacy, there is a lot of speculation throughout the country about what life would be like if Donald Trump were to run for president once more. There is also conjecture on the potential impact of his leadership on global matters, such as the ongoing crisis in Ukraine.

Trump’s vision for the United States and the international world is embodied in these five major actions:

Also read: President gives Delhi LG the authority to appoint and choose officials and board members.

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1. Wide-ranging deportations

The vice presidential candidate Kamala Harris’s opponent in the November election has vowed to start the biggest deportation of undocumented immigrants in US history on his first day in office. “We’re going to get them out as fast as we can,” he has said, demanding the expulsion of undocumented immigrants who are “poisoning the blood of our country.”

The 78-year-old, who gained notoriety for his abandoned plan to build a wall between the US and Mexico, has said that he would be happy to “use the military” in the project and that he would establish detention facilities to handle applicants for expulsion.

“On day one of my new term in office, I will sign an executive order making clear to federal agencies that under the correct interpretation of the law, going forward the future children of illegal aliens will not receive automatic US citizenship,” he said in a campaign video.

Resuming his travel ban from certain countries where the majority population is Muslim is another of his declared goals to “keep terrorists the hell out of our country.”

2. “Go, baby, go, drill!”

The 2015 Paris climate accords were closed by Trump during his first term, and if reelected, his campaign has promised to withdraw from the pact once more.

He made a pledge to supporters at a rally earlier in the summer to “stop Biden’s wasteful spending and rapidly terminate the green new scam”—a reference to the funds his replacement had promised to mitigate climate change. In Wisconsin, Trump used a classic Republican catchphrase, “We will ‘drill, baby, drill,'” to declare, “I will repeal crooked Joe Biden’s insane electric vehicle mandate.” He promised that “energy costs will come down very quickly.” “We’ll be cutting your energy costs in half in many cases.”

3. The cryptocurrency frenzy

In keeping with his pledge to make America the “Crypto and cryptocurrency capital of the world,” tech billionaire and right-wing conspiracy theorist Elon Musk will head a comprehensive audit of government waste, according to Trump’s statements.

Furthermore, Trump intends to tax all imports by “more than 10 percent.” Not the companies who export the items, but US companies and eventually their customers are responsible for paying import tariffs. He said the money raised will go toward a “large tax cut for the business class, middle class, upper class, and lower class.”

In addition to engaging in a bitter trade war with the People’s Republic of China during his first term in office, he plans to revoke the Asian powerhouse’s classification as the “most favored nation,” which was bestowed in an effort to promote trade.

4. The ambiguity of abortion

Trump never misses an opportunity to underline that his three conservative Supreme Court choices and his own actions have contributed to a considerable deterioration of abortion rights in the US. But he is less sure about the future of access to reproductive health care.

In order to avoid alienating the religious right, the Republican has refrained from advocating for a federal ban on abortion, contending that this is a state-by-state issue. He has issued a warning, saying, “You must follow your heart on this issue but remember, you must also win elections.” “My Administration will be great for women and their reproductive rights,” he further pledged.

5. “The Ukraine war “plan””

Trump has been claiming for months that he could settle the crisis in Ukraine in “24 hours,” but he has never given an explanation.

Connecting Trump’s More Comprehensive Foreign Policy to the Ukraine Conflict
His critics claim that his plan requires Kyiv to turn over land that Russia illegally seized in 2014 and 2022. In an interview, he declared, “I have a very specific plan how to stop Russia and Ukraine, and I have a certain idea — maybe not a plan, but an idea — for China.” “But I’m unable to offer them to you since I won’t be able to use them and they will be a huge failure if I do. Part of it is surprising, don’t you think?

When the war with Hamas first broke out, Trump presented himself as an ardent ally of Israel. He suddenly sounded more skeptical of the US ally’s military operation in Gaza, saying, “I’m not sure that I’m loving the way they’re doing it,” in his remarks.

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