President Donald Trump’s political comeback success is now cemented in history. What is not a settled fact, however, is the legacy of his second term, only months into its administration.
Nevertheless, Mr. Trump’s presidential actions thus far, especially domestic ones, have gone generally well — despite his opponents’ dire warnings of imminent societal and economic disaster. His international efforts, meanwhile, many of which are still underway, have also shown positive results. He has specifically brokered a half-dozen peace deals and brought the combatants in the Russia-Ukraine war to the negotiating table – progress seemingly unimaginable only a few months ago.
Is there some essential underlying reason for these early successes?
Much has been written about the skills Mr. Trump brought to the presidency, including his background as a show business impresario, his experience with public relations and self-promotion, and brashly facing down hostile media and other critics.
He certainly has brought a unique set of these skills to the Oval Office, but other presidents with their own sets of impressive personal skills have also been able to dominate the news and inspire adulation from voters.
Going down the list of the 44 other men who have held the nation’s highest office, one sees that the largest number were previously lawyers, followed by farmers and ranchers, career military officers, and a few academics. One was a movie actor (Ronald Reagan). One was a journalist (Warren Harding). One was a mining engineer (Herbert Hoover). A few had some business experience. Almost all held some public office before becoming president.
But Donald Trump also brought one new significant experience, which no one else had — he was a full-blown successful entrepreneurial capitalist. He had held no office, appointed or elected, before becoming president. To understand why this is so significant, it is important to first understand the historical economic and political context that enabled his rise to power.
The United States of America is the oldest and most successful full-scale democratic capitalist nation in the world. In spite of the idealism expressed in its Declaration of Independence, its beginnings were flawed. But the abolition of slavery, ending segregation, enacting women’s suffrage, and full civil rights came later — enabled by a uniquely American Constitution and democratic institutions.
The birth and early years of the U.S. Republic also coincided with the occurrence of the global Industrial Revolution. With its growing population, expanding cities, and immense natural resources, entrepreneurship and innovation flourished. The challenges, achievements, and sacrifices made in economic depressions and two world wars made the U.S. the most powerful nation on earth.
Which brings us to the present day.
Almost from its beginning, the U.S. had two major political parties. Although their names have changed over the decades, one has always been more liberal, while one has always been more conservative.
The older party, the Democrats, was initially more conservative in some respects. They supported or tolerated slavery, opposed women’s suffrage, and generally opposed societal change. The Republican Party, which was born out of the collapse of the Whig Party and amid the rise of the anti-slavery movement in the 1850s, was initially viewed as more radical for the time. Republicans opposed slavery and later became the driving force behind early civil rights legislation and women’s suffrage.
Over the years, and especially after 1933, Democrats moved to the left, and Republicans moved to the right. But both major parties supported and celebrated America’s underlying history and traditions.
Recently, however, a part of the Democrat Party has moved rhetorically beyond the boundaries of the shared American democratic capitalist experience and begun arguing for a neo-Marxist political regime in the U.S. — one that will replace free enterprise and entrepreneurship with government-run and controlled commercial and industrial institutions and policies.
Early signs of an assault on the traditional American model began with the administration of President Barack Obama in 2009. Most notably, he unilaterally tried to backtrack the U.S. role in the world, explicitly apologizing for America abroad.
Donald Trump won an upset victory in 2016 in a voter reaction to the Obama years and rejection of an anticipated Hillary Clinton administration. Despite a number of noteworthy and historic economic successes, the unexpected global pandemic led to a disputed defeat by Joe Biden in 2020.
Although he had run as a moderate and traditional liberal, Joe Biden, as president in 2021, began enabling the radical wing of his party to begin a more comprehensive dismantling of the democratic capitalist model.
A period of inflation, education decline, unsettled urban life, woke culture uncertainty, and exceptionally divisive politics followed.
The traditional Republican Party and its leaders had been unable to halt the national drift to the left following Obama’s election in 2008. Nor did there seem to be any GOP lawyer/elected official capable of moving the electorate to reverse this trend.
But what is now emerging is a new Republican Party, becoming a working-class, rural, and small-town party with increasing numbers of blacks, Hispanics, and young persons who formerly were part of the old Democrat Party base.
This party is led not by an establishment lawyer or career politician, but by a now familiar capitalist entrepreneur whom the radical left had previously defeated and then tried to destroy.
Donald Trump rose from unprecedented defeat and attempted “cancellation” to restore the traditional and still vibrant U.S. model. As probably no lawyer, farmer, military officer, or academic could, he understood how American democratic capitalism really worked and could be employed for national recovery. He knew the rough-and-tumble world of negotiating and how to play political hardball. He also knew how U.S. power could be used to peaceably restore U.S. interests in the world — and he had the will to use that power.
And so, the U.S. is now led for the first time by one of its own democratic capitalists. His colorful and provocative showmanship appeals to his political base and enrages his opponents, but his underlying entrepreneurial spirit and skills are on a course of a much broader and potentially unifying historical quest.
Herald Boas is a contributor to AMAC Newsline.

DJT. Love him or hate him, we did not vote for him to be “Presidential” nor diplomatic. We did not vote for him to compromise with Leftist Democrats nor to “go along to get along” with RINOs (like Senate majority leader John Thune et al.)
We hired (voted for) Trump to kick butt, take names and right the ship, restore Common Sense and get rid of asinine “Wokeism Policies” (and so much more). Mid terms are crucial. Keep your guard up and get involved at the local level.
semper Vigilans.
Great article of how Pres. Trump has rocked the political establishment and has been trying to right this nation again. The old dogs of both parties are dragging their feet to upset the forward motion of Pres. Trump’s policies. Voters need to wake up and elect representatives that will truly work for the needs of the nation.
No where in this article do I see mention that our country is a Constitutional Republic…
“A constitutional republic is a form of government where citizens elect representatives to govern on their behalf, with the government’s power limited by a written constitution that protects fundamental rights and ensures a separation of powers. Key features include elected officials, a supreme governing document, and a system where the people are the ultimate source of authority but are not bound by the will of a simple majority. This structure provides stability and prevents tyranny by establishing a balanced government that is a government of laws, not of men.”
I love this president!!! Just think how much more successful he would be if the shister, cesspool-dwelling liberal judges and RINOs would get out of the way.
This is the reason I’ve supported him, because he is a businessman and understands profit/loss and how to manage. HOWEVER, I really hate his push for the AI centers – from being so horribly intrusive to personal information to their extreme water usage for cooling and helping to destroy our already soon to fail power grid, let alone possible use of eminent domain. Where these horrific centers are already in place, people are reporting large increases in energy costs. In Indiana, East of Indianapolis the community where they were going to build one of these horrible things, they were under a non-disclosure to name the ultimate user/owner of the center – why would ANY LOCAL GOVERNMENT vote for something like this?
I liked Trump from the very beginning because he was a business man and Not a politician
Primarily, President Trump is a successful business man and NOT beholden to ANYONE! ALL politicians owe big when elected and are controlled by those who helped elect them, for good or ill. Americans elected DJT, not “big money” people behind the scenes. He serves Americans exclusively.
A businessman taking care of business… What a concept!
All Democrats eventually fit into the same mold. Some naturally, some after a little adjustment. Trump refuses to adapt to the shape of it, that is the reason for the frenzy and hate. The fear that there actually is someone who is not going to bend to the will of the swamp and play the game accordingly to the swamp rules..
I have like all that President Trump has done to maintain our historical basis as the USA based on what was done via our US Constitution. As a supporter of the Hillsdale College, he keeps our USA foundation in place as does Hillsdale College does to.
GOD is the reason we still exist as a nation and He will see that we stay that way, no matter what some may think. We are blessed by GOD and nothing will change that situation.
Common sense is what this country needed badly. The Biden administration failed the American people and the election proved the failure. The Democrats are doubling down on their failures and haven’t got a clue, no plan or no leader. Thank you President Trump for restoring our great republic. JD Vance 2028.
TRUMP is succeeding because he represents THE AMERICAN PEOPLE!
Truly an inspiring article! The Democrats have truly come close in destroying America! Pray that educated our generation ! What has been going on to keep our nation strong!
The Trump effect is what Americans wanted and needed.
A leader of the Nation based on the Constitution. Rather than Radical Marxist Doctrine of The Democratic Party!
God Bless President Trump!
MAGA!
He is the people’s President. He is awesome!
deport illegals aliens guy
Oops forgot the our Younger Generation to keep values, to keep them inform!
The article stated some of the professions of past presidents, lawyers, farmers, etc. What was Obama’s “profession before entering politics when he ran for the senate? He was a rabble rouser who never had a real job in his life, not even at a McDonalds. It’s no wonder he was such a failure.
What a straightforward analysis of President Trump’s rise to power and his use of it. I’m already converted, but how interesting to see many Americans of all descriptions, realizing that his approach embodies the American Spirit, and the road to recovery and success for the country and it’s people. Why so many resist accepting the success and restating their failed policies that hurt the people and our institutions, is a mystery to me. Our schools are not only failing academically due to woke ideas, but are failing to educate students in a proper background of our history, including understanding and appreciating the Constitution and it’s benefits for a free society. In my relatively long life, I’ve never seen such discord, much of it based on false premises and a total misunderstanding of how our government is supposed to work.
He is not like so many in Washington this is what we wanted he is doing great. Everything is a uphill battle with the Dems trying all they can do to stop him. All Blue run states that have high crime and they will look into a camera and lie that they have no problem I hope people fire all these mayors and governors that want crime to keep going.
Quite an impressive display of how to literarily “Gild the Lily”. “You can put Lipstick on a Pig, but it’s still a Pig”. Just sayin’……
Is it only me, but it really bothers me when Trump starts joking about being a dictator. And it is a dark day for Americans if Trump can fire board members on the independent Federal Reserve just because he wants an interest cut.
Does Trump really believe that American consumers do not pay for his tariffs & that tariffs are causing inflation or does he not want to admit it cuz it is bringing a few bilion dollars into the IRS or wherever the tariff taxes go. The impact of tariffs are just starting to show up with increased inflation and will continue to go up in the next six months as the impact impacts jobs and costs. I feel that this is a hidden tax on the lower and middle class Americans & why.
Trump is micromanaging too much & fires or wants to fire anyone that does not agree with him. Examples of micromanging things is want to paint border wall black, will build a ballroom at WH because they wanted one for 150 years but did not have a builder as POTUS, will change the name of Gulf of Mexico, If NFL team does not go back to Redskin name then I will cut off funds for stadium and on and on. What is message from Trump on pardons to +1500 people of jan 6th and the bullying by Trump & Vance on Zellensky at WH in February was seen by the whole world. And how can Vance & Trump believe they are eating the cats and dogs & then never help that city recover from these comments. My biggest worry these week is that painting the border wall black looks like a idea from the devil or satan & that scares me as a Christian.