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Promises Made, Promises Kept: The Return of an America First Future
This affects the entire country.

When presidents stand before a joint session of Congress, they like to declare that “The state of our union is strong.” 

President Donald Trump can say those words and mean them. Millions of Americans agree. 

Thirteen months ago, the border was open to anyone willing to cross it, including criminals, cartel operatives, and nearly 300,000 unaccompanied children, thousands who are now considered unaccounted for.

Three years of inflation had wiped out wage gains, pushed up rents, and made the grocery store anxious territory for families watching every dollar. 

Illogical gender-identity and DEI policies in schools and sports were threatening fairness and the safety of women and girls. The Biden administration’s policies made things worse at every turn—opening the border, killing American energy, rejecting biological reality, and handing our economic future to our rivals. 

That was a little more than a year ago. The progress since then has been nothing short of staggering.  

Inflation, which hit 9.1 percent under the previous administration, plummeted to 1.7 percent in the last three months of 2025. 

Energy production is at record levels—real money back in the pockets of families who had grown accustomed to watching their purchasing power shrink.  

At the southern border, illegal crossings dropped 87 percent in 2025, to their lowest level since 1970. We are once more sovereign over our frontiers. Communities that bore the costs of those lawless years—the ones that saw their schools overwhelmed, their hospitals strained, their streets where parents stopped letting children play outside—feel the difference now. 

None of this happened by accident, and none of it was unopposed. It happened because the Trump administration chose to act where others had only talked: producing American energy, securing the border, putting American workers and families first. And it held the line against an implacable establishment that fought against America First policies every step of the way. 

The men and women of U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement and U.S. Customs and Border Protection are doing some of the hardest law enforcement work in America—removing violent criminals, dismantling trafficking networks, and upholding immigration laws written to protect American families.

They are doing it in courts that have tried to stop them, in cities whose officials have defied them, and on streets where they have been shot at, doxxed, and assaulted. They deserve an administration that stands behind them without reservation. Today they have one. 

Securing the border and securing prosperity for American families are the same fight.

This administration is writing new trade rules—framework agreements with the United Kingdom, the European Union, Japan, South Korea, and partners across the Western Hemisphere—that put American workers first. 

In the past, American trade policy served Beijing and Brussels. Not anymore. The January numbers alone told a story of prosperity: 130,000 new private sector jobs, unemployment at 4.3 percent, wages up 3.7 percent. 

The American people didn’t give this administration a narrow mandate.  Seventy-seven million Americans …
Promises Made, Promises Kept: The Return of an America First Future This affects the entire country. When presidents stand before a joint session of Congress, they like to declare that “The state of our union is strong.”  President Donald Trump can say those words and mean them. Millions of Americans agree.  Thirteen months ago, the border was open to anyone willing to cross it, including criminals, cartel operatives, and nearly 300,000 unaccompanied children, thousands who are now considered unaccounted for. Three years of inflation had wiped out wage gains, pushed up rents, and made the grocery store anxious territory for families watching every dollar.  Illogical gender-identity and DEI policies in schools and sports were threatening fairness and the safety of women and girls. The Biden administration’s policies made things worse at every turn—opening the border, killing American energy, rejecting biological reality, and handing our economic future to our rivals.  That was a little more than a year ago. The progress since then has been nothing short of staggering.   Inflation, which hit 9.1 percent under the previous administration, plummeted to 1.7 percent in the last three months of 2025.  Energy production is at record levels—real money back in the pockets of families who had grown accustomed to watching their purchasing power shrink.   At the southern border, illegal crossings dropped 87 percent in 2025, to their lowest level since 1970. We are once more sovereign over our frontiers. Communities that bore the costs of those lawless years—the ones that saw their schools overwhelmed, their hospitals strained, their streets where parents stopped letting children play outside—feel the difference now.  None of this happened by accident, and none of it was unopposed. It happened because the Trump administration chose to act where others had only talked: producing American energy, securing the border, putting American workers and families first. And it held the line against an implacable establishment that fought against America First policies every step of the way.  The men and women of U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement and U.S. Customs and Border Protection are doing some of the hardest law enforcement work in America—removing violent criminals, dismantling trafficking networks, and upholding immigration laws written to protect American families. They are doing it in courts that have tried to stop them, in cities whose officials have defied them, and on streets where they have been shot at, doxxed, and assaulted. They deserve an administration that stands behind them without reservation. Today they have one.  Securing the border and securing prosperity for American families are the same fight. This administration is writing new trade rules—framework agreements with the United Kingdom, the European Union, Japan, South Korea, and partners across the Western Hemisphere—that put American workers first.  In the past, American trade policy served Beijing and Brussels. Not anymore. The January numbers alone told a story of prosperity: 130,000 new private sector jobs, unemployment at 4.3 percent, wages up 3.7 percent.  The American people didn’t give this administration a narrow mandate.  Seventy-seven million Americans …
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