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Trump's Second Term Plans: Wildest Proposals for 2025 and Beyond

  
Via:  Devangelical  •  one month ago  •  9 comments

By:   Ryan Bort (Rolling Stone)

Trump's Second Term Plans: Wildest Proposals for 2025 and Beyond
Donald Trump has made a slew of promises related to the economy, immigration, climate change, and more. He will now be able to fulfill them.

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I'm happy to see trump introduce political revenge and retribution into the body politic with full maga support ...


S E E D E D   C O N T E N T


Donald Trumpwon the 2024 presidential election in convincing fashion, trouncing Kamala Harris in the Electoral College and becoming the first Republican to win the popular vote in 20 years. He claimed during his victory speech that he has "an unprecedented and powerful mandate" to do what he wants — and what he wants, judging by promises he's made on the campaign trail, is terrifying.

He'll also be far better-equipped to carry out his agenda than he was during his first term in office.

Trump reportedly did not expect to win the presidency in 2016, which isn't surprising considering how ill-prepared he and his team were to take control of the country. He appointed established conservatives to key positions before learning some had personal principles that extended beyond indulging the his ego. Trump wreaked havoc on the United States for four years, but the damage might have been even greater if he wasn't battling career public servants who tried to check his impulses, or if he wasn't such a political neophyte.

Trump will not be the dog that caught the car heading into his second term. He has now had nearly a decade to burnish his understanding of how Washington, D.C., works, and to assemble a political machine laser-focused on exploiting a federal government full of loopholes to give him the power to enact an authoritarian agenda that could spell disaster for the economy, the environment, human rights, and democracy itself.

The Supreme Court deciding in July that presidents have total immunity from prosecution for "official" acts only expands the breadth of what Trump may attempt to pull. Regardless of whether Trump stays within the bounds of the law, the nation is facing a dark new era after he's inaugurated in January. "Yes, we do really want to burn it all down," a Republican close to Trump told Rolling Stone in June.

Here's what Trump has said he will do once in office:

He will indict Biden and his other political enemies


Trump has made abundantly clear that he will use a potential second term in office to take revenge on his enemies. He's planning to do so by helming the Justice Department with a loyal attorney general willing to appoint a slew of special prosecutors to go after everyone he feels has wronged him. These plans have been in the works since 2021, as Rolling Stonereported in August, and focus not just on Biden, whom Trump believes is the primary force behind his myriad legal woes, but also on Special Counsel Jack Smith, Attorney General Merrick Garland, FBI Director Christopher Wray, and plenty of others. "There are almost too many targets to keep track of," one Trump adviser familiar with the discussions says.

Trump's potential revenge tour has already been mapped out in detail. Rolling Stonereported last year, for example, that Trump's team has been exploring legal strategies to criminally charge Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg — who indicted the former president for paying porn star Stormy Daniels to keep quiet about an alleged affair ahead of the 2016 election — including by using the DOJ's civil rights divisions to go after Bragg, who is Black, for "racist law enforcement policies," as one source put it. The Washington Post has also reported on the specificity of Trump's plans to take down his haters, noting in November that he even wants to investigate former allies he believes have turned on him, including his former Attorney General William Barr and former chief of staff John Kelly.

The plans for retribution are being hatched behind the scenes, but Trump has been fantasizing publicly about putting them into motion. "The precedent on doing what they did, with the weaponization, using the DOJ and the FBI to go after their political opponents, that is so bad," Trump told Lou Dobbs in January, referring to the idea that all of his indictments and all of the lawsuits he is facing are politically motivated. "That means I can do it too," he continued. "Pandora's Box is open and that means that I can do it too."

He will round up, detain, and deport undocumented immigrants — and some documented ones, too


Trump is planning to crack down on illegal immigration — hard. The New York Timesreported last November that he is going to "scour" the nation for undocumented immigrants and deport them "by the millions per year." He wants to throw the undocumented into detention camps while their cases are being processed, but will do away with due-process hearings to make it easier to kick them out of the United States. He'll reportedly pull money from the military to fund the effort, if Congress won't comply.

Trump intensified his rhetoric throughout the campaign, telling Newsmax in March that he will order mass deportations of undocumented immigrants on his first day back in office, and that he'll start with the "bad ones." He added that he will enlist local law enforcement to help, that will give police "immunity" to crack down on migrants, and that it will be a "bloody story." He has said that migrants are "poisoning" America, "infesting" and "occupying" its cities.

Trump has also indicated he doesn't want to stop at migrants in the United States illegally. He has repeatedly demonized the Haitian migrants living in Springfield, Ohio, following the proliferation of a false story about how they are eating the town's pets, one that Trump pushed to tens of millions of people from the debate state. The majority of these Haitians are in the country legally, holding Temporary Protected Status. "In my opinion, it's not legal," Trump said in October, vowing to revoke their protections and deport them.

He will send the military to the border — and potentially use it against Americans who oppose him


Trump mused late last year that he will be a "dictator" for one day only, should he win reelection. Rolling Stonereported shortly after his comments that part of this authoritarian plot is to send potentially hundreds of thousands of troops to help seal the border and build new detention camps to house migrants. Trump tried to do something similar during his first term, but he was shot down by officials and attorneys due to fears of legal repercussions. He's going to surround himself with more compliant actors in a potential second term, who are already working on ways to make a militarized border "perfectly legal."

Trump told Time Magazine in April that he would also be willing to deploy the military inside the United States, not just at the border, as part of his effort to rid the nation of undocumented immigrants. He told Fox News a few months later that he believes the military should be used against "the enemy within," or "radical left lunatics." He later cited Reps. Nancy Pelosi and Adam Schiff as examples.

He will invade Mexico


Trump was talked out of bombing Mexico to take out drug labs during his first term, but he hasn't let go of the idea. "'Attacking Mexico,' or whatever you'd like to call it, is something that President Trump has said he wants 'battle plans' drawn for," a source familiar told Rolling Stone last year. "He's complained about missed opportunities of his first term, and there are a lot of people around him who want fewer missed opportunities in a second Trump presidency."

He will round up the homeless and send the National Guard into cities to fight crime


Trump claimed last year that our "once great cities have become unlivable, unsanitary nightmares, surrendered to the homeless, the drug-addicted, and the violent and dangerously deranged." His solution is to ban urban camping and corral the unhoused into tent cities, which will be staffed by "doctors, psychiatrists, social workers, and drug-rehab specialists." Trump says he will pay for all this with the money the U.S. saves from "ending mass, unskilled migration."

Trump will crack down on crime by sending the National Guard into American cities, presumably at his own discretion. He's also said he wants to pull federal funding from law enforcement that doesn't use stop-and-frisk policing, a practice prone to racial profiling that has been deemed unconstitutional.

He will give conspiracy theorist RFK Jr. free rein over America's health agencies


Trump and RFK Jr. appear to have struck a deal when the political scion suspended his own presidential candidacy in August: RFK Jr. endorses Trump and acts as a surrogate for the rest of the race, and Trump gives RFK Jr. control of the nation's health agencies if he makes it back into the White House. Trump has been plenty public about his intention to empower Kennedy. He said during a rally in New York City that he would let Kennedy "go wild on medicines" and "go wild on food," and has said Kennedy will take on women's health, as well.

Trump is indeed heading back to the White House, and RFK Jr. is already plotting his takeover. The vaccine conspiracy theorist says he's going to move to remove fluoride from drinking water and that parts of the Food and Drug Administration "have to go." He has also reportedly devised 30-, 60-, and 90-days plans for how he wants to reform the nation's health systems after Trump is inaugurated.

He will ban abortion nationwide


Trump has tried to have his cake and eat it too when it comes to reproductive rights, repeatedly bragging about installing the Supreme Court justices who overturned Roe v. Wade while at the same time trying to paint himself as a moderate on an issue he has said is killing Republicans, as Rolling Stone has reported.

The New York Times reported in February, however, that Trump supports a 16-week national abortion ban. Rolling Stone later reported that the former president's team was furious that word of the plan got out, but Trump didn't seem to mind: He floated the idea himself during an interview with Sean Hannity in early March. "More and more I'm hearing about 15 weeks. I haven't decided yet." he said. "The number 15 is mentioned. I haven't agreed to any number. I'm going to see. We want to take an issue that was very polarizing and get it settled and solved so everybody can be happy."

"We're on the side of women," Trump added.

Trump later insisted that he will leave the issue up to the states, but there's plenty of reason to doubt this — not least of which is that he undermined this position just days after first making it. When the Arizona Supreme Court revived a near-total ban on abortion from 1864, Trump, fearing backlash, said the state went too far, and that "it'll be straightened out."

The conservative activists shaping Trump's potential policy seem dead-set on a national ban, as well. Project 2025 — the Trump-oriented transition project helmed by the conservative Heritage Foundation with help from people loyal to the former president — calls for a de-facto ban by invoking an 1873 law to criminalize shipping the abortion pill.

He will bring back the death penalty in a big way


Trump is a big fan of the death penalty. Rolling Stonereported last year on how the Trump administration went on a killing mission during his final year in office, executing 13 people in six months after the federal government had only put three people to death in the previous 60 years. Trump is thirsty for more. Rolling Stonereported subsequently that Trump is committed to expanding the use of the death penalty if he's reelected, and that he's talked about bringing back death by firing squad and hanging, according to two sources. He's even suggested the possibility of executing people by guillotine. He's floated executing anyone convicted of dealing drugs.

He will make stuff more expensive by taxing all imported goods


"When companies come in and they dump their products in the United States, they should pay, automatically, let's say a 10-percent tax," Trump told Larry Kudlow on Fox Business last August.

The Washington Postreported that Trump does indeed want to institute a "universal baseline tariff" to create a "ring around the U.S. economy." The Post notes economists from both sides of the aisle are alarmed at the idea. "On net, this would harm the American economy substantially" and "gum up our whole production process," Chris Clarke, an economist at Washington State University, told the paper. "Producers would have higher costs, and now all the consumers are paying higher prices for goods that used to be imported."

Politicoreported in April that Trump advisers are also plotting to devalue the dollar, should he retake office. The move would likely make U.S. exports cheaper, but it could also cause inflation to skyrocket. Jake Colvin, president of the National Foreign Trade Council, told the outlet that "pursuit of a weaker dollar could spark a number of unintended consequences including inflationary global currency and trade wars."

Trump continued to tout tariffs throughout the rest of his campaign, but was exposed to know very little about how they work when pressed by Bloomberg Editor-In-Chief John Micklethwait during a tense interview at the Economic Club of Chicago in October. "Three-trillion worth of imports and you will add tariffs to every single one of them, and push up the cost for all of these people to buy foreign goods," Micklethwait said. "That is just simple mathematics."

Trump replied that he was "always good at mathematics."

He will reevaluate America's participation in NATO


Trump has long griped about the longstanding military alliance, arguing that European nations aren't paying their fair share. Rolling Stonereported last year that Trump wants to wind down America's participation in NATO to a "standby" role if his demands aren't met, which would be a gift to Vladimir Putin as Russia continues to fight for control of Ukraine.

"It would be a tremendously stupid endeavor, especially at a time when war in Europe rages, and much of Europe is looking to the United States to deter further conflict," Dr. Aaron Stein, a Black Sea Fellow at the Foreign Policy Research Institute, told Rolling Stone, reacting to Trump's NATO-skeptic policy goals. "Trading away allies based on ignorance, and Trump is ignorant about this issue, is just silly for broader U.S. national security."

The conflict in Europe shouldn't be a problem, however, as Trump has claimed repeatedly that he'll be able to end the war in Ukraine in a day.

His rhetoric around the issue has intensified throughout the campaign. During a February rally in South Carolina, Trump said he would encourage Russia to do "whatever the hell they want" to "delinquent" NATO member nations.

He will roll back all of Biden's climate progress and reinvest in fossil fuels


The United States set a record for oil output during Biden's first term in office, but Trump wants to do even more damage to the environment. He's made clear he's going to "drill, baby, drill" on his first day in office, and that he will roll back clean-energy initiatives, including those included in the Inflation Reduction Act.

The Washington Post reported in May that Trump asked oil executives visiting Mar-a-Lago to raise $1 billion to help him win in November, promising to roll back dozens of Biden's climate measures. The revelation came a day after Politico reported that fossil fuel industry lawyers and lobbyists have been drafting executive orders for Trump to sign should he retake the White House. The Post later reported that Trump told oil executives in Houston that he would immediately approve their projects and expand drilling.

Trump is also expected to once again pull the United States out of the Paris Climate Accords, the international agreement to work to hold the global temperature below 2 degrees Celsius.

He will construct "freedom cities" filled with flying cars


Trump laid out a plan early last year to build 10 "freedom cities" on federal land as part of what he described as a "new American future." The cities would feature flying cars so as to ensure that "America, not China, leads the revolution in air mobility."

"We'll actually build new cities in our country again," Trump said. "These freedom cities will reopen the frontier, reignite American imagination, and give hundreds of thousands of young people and other people, all hardworking families, a new shot at home ownership and, in fact, the American dream."

He will try to overhaul the education system in the MAGA image


Trump said last September that he wants to shutter the Department of Education and pass the buck to state governments, claiming that federal education employees "in many cases hate our children." Trump may not want the federal government dictating how schools operate, but he plans to use his office to go after institutions that don't adhere to MAGA ideals, vowing to "cut funding for any school or program pushing critical race theory, gender ideology, or other inappropriate racial, sexual, or political content on our children," and even to have the Justice Department open investigations into recalcitrant schools.

Trump added during a rally in Virginia in March that he will pull federal funding for schools with vaccine requirements.

He will do what he can to flood the nation with guns


Trump told the National Rifle Association's annual convention in May that if elected he will "roll back every Biden attack on the Second Amendment." This means loosening background checks; making it easier for people convicted of domestic abuse to get guns; making it easier for Americans under 21 to get guns; and reopening the gun show loophole, which essentially allowed anyone who wasn't selling guns in a store to skirt federal regulations. Trump also said he will fire the director of the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives, alleging the ATF is too hard on gun owners.

Guns are the leading cause of death of children in the United States.

He will torch the First Amendment by going after non-MAGA media


Trump has long railed against unflattering media coverage, whether come by way of CNN, MSNBC, or other "fake news" outlets, or from any of his many propaganda arms, including Fox News. He's teased real retribution against the former category, however, raising concerns over the damage another term could do to the First Amendment.

"MSNBC (MSDNC) uses FREE government approved airwaves, and yet it is nothing but a 24 hour hit job on Donald J. Trump," he wrote in November. "It is the world's biggest political contribution to the Radical Left Democrats who, by the way, are destroying our Country. Our so-called 'government' should come down hard on them and make them pay for their illegal political activity. Much more to come, watch!"

A few weeks later, Kash Patel, a former adviser who is still very much in Trump's orbit, emphasized the point, telling former White House strategist Steve Bannon that a new Trump administration "will go out and find the conspirators, not just in government but in the media" and "come after them."

"Whether it's criminally or civilly, we'll figure that out," Patel added. "But yeah, we're putting you all on notice. We're actually going to use the Constitution to prosecute them for crimes they said we have always been guilty of but never have."

He has also regularly said that major broadcast networks should have their licenses revoked — from when he said CNN and NBC are "crooked" and "should have their licenses or whatever they have taken away" for not airing one of his speeches in January, to pushing for CBS and ABC to have their licenses stripped down the stretch of the campaign.

He will legally delegitimize trans Americans


Trump wants to codify the discrimination of trans Americans. He's said he would move to enact a federal law stating that there are only two genders, push Congress to ban gender-affirming care for minors, and punish doctors and hospitals who treat transgender youth. He has also vowed to restore his first administration's ban on trans Americans serving in the military, and work to prevent trans women from competing in women's sports. Trump ramped up his anti-trans rhetoric as Election Day drew near, repeatedly pushing the insane lie that Democrats want to give schools the power to change the gender of children without parental consent.

He will pardon the Jan. 6 rioters


Trump and his allies in Congress view the Jan. 6 attack on the U.S. Capitol as a noble effort, and have long lamented how those arrested for breaking into Congress have been treated. Trump said during a town hall last May that he will "most likely" pardon "a large portion of them."

He told Time Magazine in April that he is weighing pardons for all of his supporters accused of attacking the Capitol — including, presumably, those who pleaded guilty to or were convicted of violent offenses. Trump glorified the rioters throughout his campaign, and defendants anticipating pardons started celebrating as soon as Trump won.

He will gut the federal government and take unprecedented control of what's left


Trump plans to gut the federal government by reclassifying tens of thousands of civil service employees so that he can fire them.

"We will clean out all of the corrupt actors in our National Security and Intelligence apparatus, and there are plenty of them," he said last March. "The departments and agencies that have been weaponized will be completely overhauled so that faceless bureaucrats will never again be able to target and persecute conservatives, Christians, or the left's political enemies."

Trump has indicated he will empower right-wing billionaire Elon Musk to eliminate waste within the government, through what Musk has dubbed the Department of Government Efficiency. Musk hasn't gone into detail about what he will eliminate, but has said the nearly $7 trillion federal budget should be cut by at least $2 trillion — which experts have said could result in disaster. The Tesla and X owner has even admitted himself that a new Trump administration would bring "hardship" to some Americans.

The federal employees that remain will, first and foremost, be loyal to Trump. Project 2025 has long been vetting potential staffers.

The former president has also said that he will take control of agencies like the Federal Trade Commission and the Federal Communications Commission, paving the way for Trump to impose his will over trade policy and the media.

The federal government will not be operating on behalf of the people of the United States during a prospective second Trump term; it will be operating on behalf of Trump.


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devangelical
Professor Principal
1  seeder  devangelical    one month ago

at least watching another iconic republican president go over the mental decline cliff while in office should be entertaining ...

 
 
 
Ozzwald
Professor Quiet
1.1  Ozzwald  replied to  devangelical @1    one month ago
at least watching another iconic republican president go over the mental decline cliff while in office should be entertaining ...

Well Reagan had mentally gone bye bye during his 2nd term, so Trump will not be covering new ground.

 
 
 
Right Down the Center
Masters Guide
1.1.1  Right Down the Center  replied to  Ozzwald @1.1    one month ago

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Igknorantzruls
Sophomore Quiet
1.2  Igknorantzruls  replied to  devangelical @1    one month ago

his plans sound just what the founders had envisioned 

 
 
 
evilone
Professor Guide
2  evilone    one month ago

A lot of what he promised was all hot air, but we'll see what he tries to do and what he actually accomplishes. A lot of these MAGA fevor dreams on their wish list would potentially put a lot of people in real prisons for life and/or start a real civil war.

 
 
 
devangelical
Professor Principal
2.1  seeder  devangelical  replied to  evilone @2    one month ago

the radical thumper faction wants a civil, ... er, religious war ...

 
 
 
The Chad
Freshman Guide
2.1.1  The Chad  replied to  devangelical @2.1    one month ago

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bugsy
Professor Participates
2.1.2  bugsy  replied to  The Chad @2.1.1    one month ago

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Trout Giggles
Professor Principal
2.2  Trout Giggles  replied to  evilone @2    one month ago
A lot of what he promised was all hot air,

I really do hope so

 
 

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