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How do Donald Trump’s first 100 days rate historically …

As he neared the end of his first 100 days in office, President Donald Trump touted his first three months as a rousing success.

"No administration has accomplished more in the first 90 days," Trump told an audience in Kenosha, Wis.

Thats a pretty high bar, especially for an administration that has registered historically low levels of support in public-approval polls for presidents this early in their terms.

The White House didnt respond to an inquiry for this article, but when asked about some of the presidents 100-day accomplishments during the April 19 press briefing, White House press secretary Sean Spicer cited a series of executive orders, including some on regulatory reform; a drop in border crossings; and job creation. He said more details would be offered as the 100-day mark approached.

We interviewed historians and considered the 100-day track records of presidents back to President Franklin D. Roosevelt. While theres a lot of nuance in gauging accomplishments, Trump doesnt have much evidence to back up his boast that his administration has accomplished the most.

First, some caveats

All presidencies are different, and theres an especially big difference between those that began after an election and those that got their start suddenly. The latter category includes presidents who took over after the death of their predecessor (such as Harry Truman and Lyndon Johnson) or their predecessors resignation (Gerald Ford).

In addition, its easier for a president to put points on the board quickly if they enter office in the midst of a national crisis. This was true for Roosevelt (the Great Depression), Truman (the end of World War II), Ford (the Watergate scandal), and Barack Obama (the Great Recession). Without a crisis, Congress is less likely to act quickly.

Perhaps most notably, there is widespread agreement among historians that the 100-day standard is arbitrary. Just because a president signs a significant law outside the 100-day window doesnt make it less of an accomplishment.

For instance, Johnson and Ronald Reagan "laid the groundwork for gigantic accomplishments" such as on civil rights and taxes, respectively, that fell outside the 100-day window, said Princeton University historian Sean Wilentz.

And both Truman and Dwight Eisenhower were preoccupied with wars during their first 100 days, said Max J. Skidmore, a University of Missouri-Kansas City political scientist who has written several books on the presidency. This meant they "did not have much in the way of legislative achievements during that period," Skidmore said.

All in all, "most presidents have not considered 100 days a significant milepost," said H.W. Brands, a presidential historian at the University of Texas-Austin whose books include Traitor to His Class: The Privileged Life and Radical Presidency of Franklin Delano Roosevelt. "It's largely a media thing."

The numbers

Lets start with the raw numbers, Our friends at the Washington Post Fact Checker did some calculations comparing Trumps bill-signing output to that of his predecessors during their first 100 days.

The Post counted 28 bills signed by Trump -- the highest since 1949, but well below the 76 signed by Roosevelt in 1933. Moreover, many of Trumps bills were "minor or housekeeping bills," and none met a longstanding political-science standard for "major bills." By contrast, at least nine of Roosevelts did.

Meanwhile, by the time of the Kenosha speech, Trump had signed 24 executive orders, 22 presidential memorandums, and 20 proclamations, the Post noted.

Some of these started the ball rolling to overturn federal regulations. While these may eventually have a significant impact, its worth noting that many new presidents routinely issue orders during their first 100 days that overturn actions of their predecessors of the opposite party.

For instance, just two days after taking office, President Bill Clinton signed orders overturning restrictions on abortion imposed during the Reagan and George H.W. Bush administrations, and with equal speed, President George W. Bush overturned Clintons opposition to a ban on aid to international groups that participate in abortions.

"Everyone does that, so it doesnt give him a comparative edge," said David Greenberg, a Rutgers University historian who has written books about Presidents Richard Nixon and Calvin Coolidge.

Trumps accomplishments

Historians we checked with mostly agreed that Trumps appointment of Neil Gorsuch to fill a Supreme Court vacancy was a significant event, and one that could influence public policy long after Trump leaves the White House.

That said, some cautioned against making too much of Gorsuchs confirmation, arguing that it followed the nearly year-long blockage of Obama nominee Merrick Garland by the Republican Senate. "It was really (Senate Majority Leader Mitch) McConnell's achievement," said Jeff Shesol, author of books on Roosevelt and Johnson and a former speechwriter for Clinton.

Meanwhile, Trumps military actions -- his missile strikes on Syria and the dropping of an unusually large bomb on an ISIS bunker -- are hardly unprecedented for a presidents first 100 days. George W. Bush attacked Iraqi radar sites to enforce a no-fly zone, and Obama pledged to double the number of U.S. military personnel in Afghanistan.

Trumps decision to pull out of the Trans-Pacific Partnership trade agreement echoes George W. Bushs decision to pull out of the Kyoto Protocol on curbing global warming. And the Trump administrations successful effort to win the release of Aya Hijazi, an American aid worker jailed for three years in Egypt on dubious charges, isnt unprecedented either. Moments after taking office in 1981, Ronald Reagan announced the imminent freeing of American hostages held in Iran for over a year.

Several historians said Trump has faced some significant setbacks as well. His first big legislative push -- to repeal and replace the Affordable Care Act -- stalled without even a final vote, and he has been slower than his predecessors in making sub-cabinet appointments. Trump also failed to submit a detailed budget proposal of the kind his predecessors had typically submitted by now.

Then theres Trumps immigration ban, which would likely count as a major accomplishment if its enacted, but which is frozen for now. It was issued, blocked by the courts, rewritten, and then blocked again.

"The fact that he has gotten so little done while having Republican majorities in both houses of Congress is a terrible indictment," Shesol said.

The champion: FDR

The 100-day record of just one president -- Franklin Roosevelt -- would be enough to cast doubt on the accuracy of Trumps claim that no administration has accomplished more.

The 15 major bills Roosevelt signed included those that created the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. and the Tennessee Valley Authority (both of which still exist) and the Home Owners Loan Corp. He signed the Agricultural Adjustment Act, which established farm subsidies, and the National Industrial Recovery Act, which started public-works efforts to reverse the Great Depression. He signed legislation to legalize the manufacture and sale of beer and wine, and he issued executive orders to establish the Civilian Conservation Corps and to effectively take the United States off the gold standard.

All in all, Roosevelt pushed the federal government to take a much bigger role than it had previously, said Adam Cohen, author of Nothing to Fear: FDR's Inner Circle and the Hundred Days That Created Modern America.

"When FDR took office, the banking system had collapsed," Cohen said. "His emergency banking act got the banks open again and the system up and running. He got the Securities Act of 1933 enacted. It was the first major federal regulation of the stock market, which laid the groundwork for the kind of government regulation we now take for granted."

Other presidents 100-day achievements

Other presidents have chalked up significant achievements as well.

Clinton signed the Family and Medical Leave Act, while Obama signed not only a nearly $800 billion stimulus package to combat a spiraling recession but also the Lily Ledbetter Fair Pay Act and a law expanding the Childrens Health Insurance Program. He also implemented two urgent economic programs formally passed in the final weeks of George W. Bushs presidency -- the Troubled Asset Relief Program and the auto industry bailout.

Other presidents have taken executive actions at least as significant as Trumps. Kennedy established the Peace Corps (later ratified by Congress). Ford, meanwhile, pardoned his predecessor, Nixon, and offered amnesty to Vietnam War draft dodgers.

Trumans first 100 days were a whirlwind of foreign-policy actions -- the end of World War II in Europe, the writing of the United Nations charter, the dropping of two atomic bombs on Japan, and Japans unconditional surrender.

Sometimes, a presidents biggest accomplishment is intangible. Roosevelt calmed a nation gut-punched by the Depression, while Johnson reassured Americans after the shock of Kennedys assassination.

"The main accomplishment of LBJ's first 100 days -- and this should not be discounted just because it did not involve a bunch of bill signings -- was to give the nation and its government a sense of stability and continuity after one of the most wrenching events of the century," said his biographer, Shesol.

Evaluating Trumps 100 days

One of the biggest impacts of Trumps first 100 days may fall into this "intangible" category.

"Even if there are not many major tangible accomplishments, his administration has changed the political and cultural trajectory of the country -- not as much as FDR did following Herbert Hoover, but more than the average new president does," Cohen said. "It has been somewhat amorphous and hard to quantify, but it is certainly something many Americans are feeling."

John Frendreis, a political scientist at Loyola University in Chicago, said Trumps 100 days seem most similar to Clintons, which were also disorganized, short of focus and marked by the failure to pass an economic stimulus package. That said, he added, "it is instructive to note that Clintons presidency turned out to be reasonably successful after this rocky start, so this suggests a similar turn-around is possible for Trump."

Whatever happens down the road, Trump, like his predecessors, is getting a dose of reality, Brands said.

"The big story of Trump's 100 days is how much reality has intruded on his notions of what a president can accomplish," he said. "Every newcomer to the White House is sobered by the experience. Trump had more sobering to do to most."

Our ruling

Trump said, "No administration has accomplished more in the first 90 days."

Trump has had some achievements in office, but at the very least, they are much less numerous and far-reaching than those of Roosevelt, the standard against whom all presidents are measured. In more recent years, other presidents, including Obama, have accomplished more in their first 100 days than Trump has, historians say. We rate the claim False.

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"No administration has accomplished more in the first 90 days."

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How do Donald Trump's first 100 days rate historically ...

Donald Trump’s next 100 days – CNN

The White House spent last week fending off unflattering critiques of Trump's first three months in the Oval Office, claiming he had racked up great achievements while also dismissing what it sees as an artificial milestone.

But the experience of the first 100 days has shown the enormity of the challenge Trump faces in enacting his proposed policies amid partisan acrimony in Washington, where Democratic opposition is determined to thwart him and Republican infighting persists.

The looming political fights of the next three months will test whether Trump has learned from his mistakes in the first 100 days and can find a way to exert his will over Congress.

Abroad, the President faces several deepening crises, most immediately the showdown with North Korea over its nuclear and missile programs.

The next 100 days will also see him venture overseas for the first time as President, and may begin to reveal exactly what he means when he talks about an "America First" foreign policy. Meanwhile, the world is watching to see whether Trump pulls America out of the Paris climate accord -- a decision that is expected within the next several weeks.

Trump geared up for the next chapter of his presidency on Saturday night, surrounding himself with adoring supporters in Pennsylvania, and conjuring up the spirit and fury of his 2016 election campaign, by bashing Washington elites and the media.

"Their priorities are not my priorities and not your priorities," Trump told the crowd in Harrisburg. "If the media's job is to be honest and tell the truth, the media deserves a very, very big fat failing grade."

The remarks were a clear sign that the President intends to leverage the support of his loyal political base against the Washington establishment in an effort to kickstart his stalled agenda. There does not seem to be any imminent plan being developed to reach out to his critics and broaden his appeal.

The President's most immediate problem is over Obamacare: He must find a way to pilot the repeal bill, which remains in limbo, neither alive, nor dead, through the House of Representatives. The failure to realize his number one campaign promise during the first 100 days dealt a humiliating blow to Trump and raised questions about his presidential authority.

The White House has repeatedly predicted in recent days that a vote on the legislation is imminent, but continued wrangling between conservatives and Republican moderates on the bill is delaying its passage.

But the House vote will only be the first hurdle for the bill, with the Senate expected to fundamentally change the legislation which Trump says must cut premiums and broaden access, but which a Congressional Budget Office report found would deprive millions of people of coverage. And even if the White House can record a political win by passing the bill, Trump will likely be saddled with the blame if Americans come to believe that the new disruption in the health care industry costs them money or access to insurance.

The health care fight has revealed an unexpected characteristic of Trump's Washington. Primary opposition to the President has not come from Democrats, who were expected to form a road block to the White House, but from his own party. And unless Trump can find a way to mobilize the Republican monopoly on power on Capitol Hill, the next 100 days could be as barren as his first 100 in terms of significant legislation.

"I think the rules in Congress, and in particular the rules in the Senate, are unbelievably archaic and slow-moving and, in many cases, unfair," Trump said Sunday on CBS's "Face the Nation."

"In many cases, you're forced to make deals that are not the deal you'd make. You'd make a much different kind of a deal. You're forced into situations that you hate to be forced into."

Still, House Speaker Paul Ryan is insisting that despite a turbulent and unproductive start, Republicans will come together to pass Trump's agenda.

"I talked about 200 days because I thought the kind of agenda that we're attempting to put together here -- overhauling health care, overhauling the tax system, rebuilding our military, securing the border -- those take more than just a few months," Ryan told reporters last week.

"They take a long time, at least a year."

While the White House has struggled to sell and pass the health care bill, the tax reform effort could be even more complicated. The administration rolled out an outline of a plan last week, which includes large tax cuts for corporations and the wealthiest Americans, and will use the next few months to sell it to the American people.

Winning public support for the bill will be one thing. Getting it passed will be even more complex because Trump will have to woo some Democrats to navigate the measure through the Senate, and there is no sign Minority Leader Chuck Schumer's troops are ready to help the President get a win.

If Democrats refuse to cooperate, the White House could seek to pass the bill with a simple majority in a maneuver known as reconciliation. That route brings an added complication, because any legislation passed in this manner must not add to the deficit. Vice President Mike Pence admitted on Sunday that "maybe in the short term" the tax reform bill will increase the deficit but argued that there was no alternative to stimulating economic growth.

"The truth is, if we don't get this economy growing at 3 percent or more, as the president believes that we can, we're never going to meet the obligations that we've made today," Pence said on NBC's "Meet the Press."

The White House's ability to manage Congress will also be tested as work starts on Trump's 2018 budget, which includes large cuts to the State Department, the Environmental Protection Agency and foreign aid -- some of which are likely to stir opposition even inside Trump's own party.

The President also faces a challenge in the coming months in securing funding for his border wall, amid opposition from some Republicans in states affected by the project. Some conservatives may also balk at spending billions of dollars to pay for a campaign promise that Trump vowed would be financed by Mexico.

The President, however, is refusing to back down on the need for a wall, that formed a symbolic foundation for his presidential campaign and is highly popular with his political base.

"We'll build the wall, folks," Trump said in Harrisburg. "Don't even worry about it. Go to sleep. Go home, go to sleep, rest assured."

Trump's challenges abroad over the next 100 days are dominated by the sharpening confrontation with North Korea. The period will likely reveal whether his strategy for containing the threat from Pyongyang based on pressuring China to rein in its ally will work in the medium term.

Trump has warmly praised China's President Xi Jinping for upping pressure on North Korean leader Kim Jong Un. But in the past, Beijing has shown that there are limits to the steps it will take to constrain Pyongyang. Another nuclear test by North Korea, which could come at any time, would likely further escalate the crisis.

The President will not travel to Asia until the fall, on a trip likely to be consumed by the North Korea showdown. But first, and within the next 100 days, he will travel to Europe, which is still trying to size up the new US President following derogatory comments about the European Union and NATO during his campaign that rattled America's allies.

The President is due to attend the NATO summit in Brussels next month.

To the relief of key European powers, Trump has stepped back from his anti-NATO rhetoric, but is still certain to demand that alliance members do more to share the financial burdens of their own defense.

Trump will also travel to Italy for the G7 summit, where his protectionist rhetoric will mark a sea change for the rich nations club which has traditionally backed free trade. Trump's moves to roll back environmental regulations introduced by the Obama administration to tackle global warming have also alarmed European governments, one reason why his decision on the Paris agreement is so keenly awaited.

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Donald Trump's next 100 days - CNN

France, Russia, Donald Trump: Your Monday Briefing – New York Times


New York Times
France, Russia, Donald Trump: Your Monday Briefing
New York Times
... In France, blue-collar voters could determine if Marine Le Pen, the far-right candidate, upends expectations in the presidential runoff on Sunday. Ms. Le Pen has capitalized on their disenchantment with pledges to impose intelligent protectionism.

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France, Russia, Donald Trump: Your Monday Briefing - New York Times

The night Donald Trump failed to break the White House correspondents’ dinner – Washington Post

His voters sent him to Washington to break stuff, and this weekend Donald Trump tried to break the annual dinner of the White House Correspondents Association. As with some of his business ventures, he was not wholly successful.

Theyre trapped at the dinner, the president boomed at a rally in Harrisburg, Pa., celebrating his first 100 days in office. Which will be very, very boring.

Instead, it was just fine. It happened. Theres an inertia to these Washington traditions, and a determination to soldier on in the face of whatever it is were facing. Everyone survived this weekend without the president, or without the crush of Hollywood celebrities who for years had been decorating the dinner in ever-increasing density, until now.

(Nicki DeMarco/The Washington Post)

It was a bit like an off-year high school reunion: diminished numbers and fewer crazy stories but still no shortage of hors doeuvres and dancing and gossip. Everyone settled for sightings of Michael Steele and Debbie Dingell instead of Jon Hamm or a Kardashian. In past years, virtually the entire cast of Modern Family would come to the dinner; this year, United Talent Agency only secured the kid who plays Luke.

[We are not fake news: At a Trump-free correspondents dinner, White House press has its say.]

This is the way it used to be, way back when, said veteran PR maven Janet Donovan at a Saturday morning brunch held under a white tent at the Georgetown home of hotelier Connie Milstein. This year there was actually room to mingle without toppling a stick-thin starlet. There were no Silicon Valley entrepreneurs monologuing at the bloody mary bar.

Was it only a year ago that Barack Obama dropped the mic, literally, at his final correspondents dinner, as if to put an exclamation point on eight years of media savvy and pop-culture propaganda? He knew his role in this circus. It was Obamas yearly chance to inspire a meme, rib a rival, come off as folksy royalty, remind the public that the media was not the enemy. His cool factor iced out the haters, smudged away red lines, papered over unkept promises. Afterward, the French ambassadors mansion would swell with swells both conservatives and liberals, all buddy-buddy in private, united by the daytime charade they pulled off together on TV.

Things are a bit different now. Trump knows how to entertain but he has developed his own traditions, and it involves relentlessly mocking the media, not laughing with it, not even for a one-night black-tie cease-fire.

A large group of Hollywood actors and Washington media are consoling each other in a hotel ballroom in our nations capital right now, the president told about 7,000 fans at the not-quite-full arena in Harrisburg.

This was only two-thirds true. There were vanishingly few Hollywood actors at the dinner in the basement of the Washington Hilton (Matthew Modine! Alan Ruck!) but the press was indeed settling for a consolation prize. Journalists communed with journalists in a stalwart and tipsy celebration of the First Amendment and, of course, themselves.

The guest list suffered not because Trump sent his regrets but, more likely, because of the chance he might attend; he remains dauntingly unpopular with the New York and Hollywood A-list that he had long aspired to join. The pre-dinner receptions, hosted by outlets such as the Wall Street Journal and The Washington Post, were staid and perfunctory, absent the usual angling for a sighting of a Game of Thrones star.

The thirst for starpower was so intense that the rumor of a Leonardo DiCaprio appearance spread like bird flu. (Yes, he was spotted in town for the Climate March protest earlier in the day, but he was spotted again, hours before the dinner, headed for the next plane out of town.)

Madeleine Albright, in a red gown pinned with a typewriter brooch, ended up being the closest thing to a bona fide star, dominating all the selfies of media-political Washingtons Twitter feed.

Tickets for the occasion, in other words, were unusually within the realm of obtainability.

This is the first time in 20 years Ive found parking in the hotel, said columnist Clarence Page.

I think the guys from the mailroom are here, said one network producer.

[Last years White House Correspondents after-party scene: Its not a party without Joe Biden]

The dinner itself featured a dutiful pep talk by Watergate legends Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein.

Mr. President, the media is not fake news, Woodward said from the dais, and the media elite applauded.

CNN and MSNBC are fake news, Trump said in Pennsylvania, and some of the 97 percent who say theyd still vote for him applauded.

Two worlds, talking past each other, from 100 miles apart. The latest prime-time iteration of POTUS vs. Beltway.

But look! There was one emissary of Trumps inner circle hitting the circuit in Washington, and a Cabinet member at that. On Friday evening, Defense Secretary Jim Mattis mingled under a poolside tent at the home of Atlantic owner David Bradley. On the menu: beef tenderloin and North Koreas latest ballistic missile test.

Some advice to people at dinner, Atlantic editor Jeffrey Goldberg told the crowd as the news of the test spread. If Jim Mattis leaves suddenly, were gonna move the party to the basement.

While Trump headed out of town, his opponents retrenched. Tens of thousands of protesters had clogged Pennsylvania Avenue in the disgusting midday heat to raise alarm about global warming. Comedian Samantha Bee, one of Trumps fiercest critics, staged a rogue event for the younger crowd at DAR Constitution Hall titled Not the White House Correspondents Dinner.

As much as I love poking at the media, Bee said, addressing journalists, I know your job has never been harder: You basically get paid to stand in a cage while a geriatric orangutan gets to scream at you. Its like a reverse zoo.

After Bees event, an elite slice of her audience took over the rooftop of the W Hotel, with its clear view of the snipers atop the White House, and ate brie sliders and creme-brulee doughnuts. Trump is like a flashlight shining into dark corners and all the cockroaches are coming out, said actress Chloe Bennett, of the ABC series Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D.

[Hasan Minhajs harshest burns at the White House correspondents dinner]

A few poor souls held signs supporting the media outside the Hilton. Keep up the good work, said one. Inside, after Woodward and Bernsteins civics lesson on the free press, Daily Show correspondent Hasan Minhaj did not spare the absentee president in his keynote roast.

The leader of our country is not here, Minhaj said. Thats because he lives in Moscow. Its a very long flight. ... As for the other guy, I think hes in Pennsylvania, because he cant take a joke.

BuzzFeeds party at a U Street bar that reeked of onions and tequila, was not showing the dinner on television. Guests instead guzzled Spicey margaritas with blue curacao and stumbled to Daft Punk and Bruno Mars. No one seemed to be over 40, and no one seemed to care what was happening at the Hilton.

We are not fake news, reiterated Jeff Mason, president of the White House Correspondents Association, as BuzzFeed capitalized on that very epithet by giving away Failing Pile of Garbage T-shirts a reference to a Trump put-down.

[The single best joke told by every president, from Obama to Washington]

As Saturday turned into Sunday, TV journalists and professional pundits began to ascend a grand staircase to the gorgeous salon of the Organization of American States on 17th Street near the Mall. This was NBC and MSNBCs after-party, so the boldfaced names were almost exclusively on-air talent: Dana Bash, Don Lemon, Chris Matthews, Thomas Roberts, Nicolle Wallace. Crystal chandeliers hung over arching palm trees and white-jacketed servers passed iceberg salad bites and tiny takeout boxes of General Tsos chicken.

Back at the Hilton, though, a less-exclusive after-party, sponsored by Thomson-Reuters, was packed to the gills and vibrating with energy, without a single famous face. It was vintage Nerd Prom couples awkwardly dancing to Wham! while juggling their martini glasses. Journalism survived to drink another day, and so did this party, for now anyway.

Staff writers Emily Heil, Elahe Izadi, Maura Judkis, Ellen McCarthy, Lavanya Ramanathan, Roxanne Roberts, Margaret Sullivan and Ben Terris contributed to this report.

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The night Donald Trump failed to break the White House correspondents' dinner - Washington Post

Donald Trump doesn’t know anything about the health care bill he’s pushing – ThinkProgress

President Donald Trump turns to the audience behind him as he finishes speaking at the Pennsylvania Farm Show Complex and Expo Center in Harrisburg, Pa., Saturday, April, 29, 2017. CREDIT: AP/Carolyn Kaster

In an interview with Face The Nations John Dickerson that aired Sunday, it appeared that President Donald Trump did not fully understand what was in the latest version of the Republican health care bill.

When Dickerson pushed Trump to acknowledge why there are critics of the bill, noting higher premiums for older people, Trump interrupted him to say that issue was fixed. Throughout the interview, Trump insisted that the latest version of the bill addressed all of the problems Dickerson mentioned, even though the bill has only become worse for low-income people, older people and people with pre-existing conditions.

When Dickerson asked Trump explain to how higher premiums were fixed under the new health care bill, he didnt have an answer.

Finally, after being pressed several times, Trump responded, This bill has evolvedBut we have now pre-existing conditions in the bill. We haveweve set up a pool for the pre-existing conditions so that the premiums can be allowed to fall. Were talking across all of the borders or the lines so that insurance companies can compete.

When Dickerson pointed out there wasnt any mention of purchasing insurance across state lines in the current legislation, Trump said, Of course, its in.

It isnt clear what Trump means when he claims that pre-existing conditions are in the bill. In fact, Republicans gutted protections for people with pre-existing conditions last week. On Tuesday, Republican leaders proposed an amendment to the latest version of the legislation that would raise premiums by thousands of dollars for people with pre-existing conditions and thus make health care unaffordable for many Americans.

Thats why it was so puzzling that Trump insisted pre-existing conditions were covered beautifully.

Journalists and health care experts, such as Andy Slavitt, the former acting administrator for the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, all pointed out that the president doesnt seem to be familiar with his partys current plan or how it functions.

Trump quickly tried to pivot away from taking about the GOP-sponsored legislation and back to the current health law. Ill tell you who doesnt cover pre-existing conditions. Obamacare. You know why? Its dead, Trump said.

When Dickerson continued to push Trump to acknowledge the MacArthur Amendment, which essentially eliminates coverage for people with pre-existing conditions, Trump said, Its not going to be here.

Despite Trumps insistence that he wasnt interested in a deadline for the bill, the White House pushed for a vote on the health care bill last week to secure a legislative victory for the president in his first 100 days. But with the latest changes to protections for people with pre-existing conditions, there was enough opposition from moderate Republicans for GOP leaders to say they were not confident they had the votes to pass it.

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Donald Trump doesn't know anything about the health care bill he's pushing - ThinkProgress