| ▲ | jancsika 3 hours ago | |
> Nothing had changed and the country wasn't "saved". Let's be precise and remove those scare quotes. In 2015/2016 Trump was literally talking about saving U.S. critical infrastructure: 1. Promising to fulfill a trillion dollar U.S. infrastructure campaign pledge to repair crumbling infrastructure[1] 2. Putting Daniel Slane on the transition team to start the process to draft said trillion dollar infrastructure bill[2] By 2017 that plan was tabled. If anyone can find it, I'd love to see Slane's powerpoint and cross-reference his 50 critical projects against what ended up making it into Biden's Inflation Reduction Act. 1: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OafCPy7K05k 2: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EdvJSGc14xA Edit: clarifications | ||
| ▲ | rurp 2 hours ago | parent [-] | |
Infrastructure Week was literally a running joke throughout Trump's first term because his staff would start by hyping up some substantive policy changes they wanted to pass, only for it to be completely derailed by yet another ridiculous/stupid/corrupt/insane thing Trump or one of his top people did. Clearly Trump himself has no interest in these sorts of substantive projects, I mean just look at his second term. He has even less interest in policy this time around and isn't even pretending to push for infrastructure or similar legislation. | ||