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President Donald Trump at the American Red Cross-National Headquarters in Washington, D.C. — July 30, 2020 | Trump White House, flickr, edited by Russell Nystrom

Of course, Trump is doing some good.

What the president has gotten right in his second term.

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Sen. Bill Cassidy (R-LA) arrives in the U.S. Capitol for a vote | Bill Clark/CQ Roll Call/Sipa USA, edited by Russell Nystrom
A  banner featuring an image of President Donald Trump is displayed on the facade of the DOJ headquarters | Gent Shkullaku/ZUMA Press Wire, edited by Russell Nystrom

Members-only posts

President Donald Trump at the American Red Cross-National Headquarters in Washington, D.C. — July 30, 2020 | Trump White House, flickr, edited by Russell Nystrom

Of course, Trump is doing some good.

What the president has gotten right in his second term.
The author’s 10-year reunion | Photo from James Breen

The Sunday — May 17

This is the Tangle Sunday Edition, a brief roundup of our independent politics coverage plus some extra features for your Sunday morning reading. What the right is doodling. What the left is doodling. Suspension of the Rules Isaac, Ari and Kmele let loose a bit in this week’s episode,
(from left) Isaac Saul moderates a panel with Mukhtar Ibrahim, Anna Palmer, and Sean McPherson at St. Olaf College | Credit: St. Olaf College, edited by Russell Nystrom

Here’s my message to America’s college students.

What I said on my recent campus tour.

Donald Trump

President Donald Trump at the American Red Cross-National Headquarters in Washington, D.C. — July 30, 2020 | Trump White House, flickr, edited by Russell Nystrom

Of course, Trump is doing some good.

What the president has gotten right in his second term.
President Donald Trump welcomes Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman Al Saud to the White House — November 18, 2025 | Anna Rose Layden/POOL, edited by Russell Nystrom

I'm responding to criticisms of my Trump corruption piece.

Addressing your feedback on our recent Friday edition.
The Indiana State Capitol at the end of Market St in Indianapolis, Indiana

Daily From the Newsletter

President Donald Trump at the American Red Cross-National Headquarters in Washington, D.C. — July 30, 2020 | Trump White House, flickr, edited by Russell Nystrom
A Ukrainian soldier wearing first-person view (FPV) drone goggles operates a controller during a drone trial.
Sen. Bill Cassidy (R-LA) arrives in the U.S. Capitol for a vote | Bill Clark/CQ Roll Call/Sipa USA, edited by Russell Nystrom
A  banner featuring an image of President Donald Trump is displayed on the facade of the DOJ headquarters | Gent Shkullaku/ZUMA Press Wire, edited by Russell Nystrom
President Donald Trump greets Chinese President Xi Jinping in Beijing — May 14, 2026 | Kenny Holston/Pool via REUTERS/File Photo, edited by Russell Nystrom

Sunday Special Edition

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This is the Tangle Sunday Edition, a brief roundup of our independent politics coverage plus some extra features including reader additions for your Sunday morning reading.

The author’s 10-year reunion | Photo from James Breen
(from left) Isaac Saul moderates a panel with Mukhtar Ibrahim, Anna Palmer, and Sean McPherson at St. Olaf College | Credit: St. Olaf College, edited by Russell Nystrom
Kevin Warsh at a Senate Banking Committee confirmation hearing | REUTERS/Kevin Lamarque, edited by Russell Nystrom
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Of course, Trump is doing some good.

By Isaac Saul May 22, 2026
View in browser President Donald Trump at the American Red Cross-National Headquarters in Washington, D.C. — July 30, 2020 | Trump White House, flickr, edited by Russell Nystrom

A quick programming note before we get into today’s piece. Tangle will be off this Monday in observance of Memorial Day, but we’ll be back in your inbox with our next regular newsletter on Tuesday, May 26. Enjoy the three-day weekend!

I have not been very happy with the president. And I haven’t been shy about that.

Like most independents, with whom Trump currently has a net –33 approval rating, I’ve found the first 16 months of his presidency alarming, frustrating, and disappointing. Less than a year into his new term, I was already writing about how things had gotten pretty bad. I’ve since written about the self-dealing and corruption, which came before the Justice Department slush fund and the IRS deal promising to never investigate or audit his business or his family for any past tax returns. After his “Praise be to Allah” social media post, which included the open threat of a war crime, I said the president seemed unwell and unfit for the job. It seems as if he innovates a new norm-breaking indignity every day, and I think being “honest,” “independent,” and “nonpartisan” necessitates calling those things out. 

I’ve harbored more personal grievances, too: The president is, for example, wreaking havoc in the area where I chose to build a home. He’s bulldozing legal obstacles and ignoring public outcry to force a multi-billion-dollar border wall project that will needlessly destroy my favorite town in America, which happens to sit on the border of Texas and Mexico (and next to one of our great national parks). 

Given these dynamics, and my overt unhappiness with these first 16 months of Trump’s second term, a lot of readers and listeners have written in saying either “it’d be nice if you ever talked about the good Trump is doing” or “is there anything good Trump has been doing?” Interestingly, these requests and questions don’t just come from his most ardent supporters, but also from curious folks in the middle and open-minded readers on the left.

My knee-jerk reaction to this question is, well, my job is not to share all the good things Trump is doing. I’m not his press secretary; I am a part of the press. I believe journalists and opinion columnists should have an adversarial relationship with people in power, so we should not spend time doing their work for them. When President Biden was in office, I very rarely (if ever) showered him in overt, uncomplicated praise. I never wrote a piece about all the things I liked about his administration. It’s just not my style as a writer or thinker, and it’s why so many on the right loved Tangle when Biden was president but grew frustrated with us once Trump reentered office. 

My other reaction is that tackling this question is not the nature of Tangle. We are wading into controversy each day; controversy necessitates multiple viewpoints, tension, argument, and debate. And typically, the stories we cover don’t have clean answers where one side or the other is the obvious hero. Our most overt praise of political leaders or their decisions will typically come through broader retrospectives, like our reviews of a presidency or a president’s first year in office (we reviewed Biden’s presidency and Trump’s first year, for example).

Yet, I also recognize these readers are asking something simple: Do I think Trump has done any good? And to this, I think it’s important to say that, well, of course. Not just accomplishments that look good in my eyes, but ones that are broadly popular across the political spectrum. Just because I have been lobbing harsh criticisms at him does not mean his presidency is all rotten or all bad; it just means I’ve had a lot to criticize. To that end, I figured I could write up my thoughts about what’s been good so far, both through a broad political lens (i.e. things I believe are widely popular) and through more traditional metrics around presidencies.

A few notes on how I’m thinking about this list: First, a “good” listed here doesn’t mean I personally think it is good, but does mean it’s the kind of thing I think a plurality or majority of Americans support. Of course, in many cases, that includes me. Second, many of these accomplishments will have some caveats, because the world is gray — not black and white — and every upside has a little downside, too. Plus, most accomplishments in an administration’s first year or two (along with many of their problems) are the product of inherited situations.

With all that throat-clearing out of the way, some thoughts:

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