By Ashley Oliver
福克斯新闻
发布时间:2026年2月24日 美国东部时间上午10:00
《五人组》联合主持人讨论民主党人抵制唐纳德·特朗普总统即将到来的国情咨文演讲的努力。
NEW 您现在可以收听福克斯新闻文章了!
收听本文
5分钟
在唐纳德·特朗普总统重返白宫后的首次国情咨文演讲前夕,他在关键竞选承诺方面的记录喜忧参半,部分承诺已兑现,而其他承诺仍悬而未决或陷入法律挑战。
特朗普2024年竞选活动的核心是移民、经济、全面关税以及结束美国参与外国冲突。在他的第二个任期进入一年多后,共和党和民主党策略师都告诉福克斯新闻数字频道,政府在其中一些领域取得了重大进展,但在其他领域却未能达到目标。
与此同时,根据福克斯新闻上个月的民调,选民认为特朗普在经济(40%支持率)、外交政策(37%支持率)和关税(37%支持率)方面表现疲软。他在移民问题上的支持率略高,为44%,在边境安全方面的净支持率为52%。
边境越境人数下降,但驱逐行动仍存争议
特朗普的主要承诺之一是通过遏制非法越境和推行激进的驱逐议程,阻止他所说的南部边境”入侵”。
自特朗普上任以来,美国国土安全部的数据显示,口岸之间的越境人数急剧下降,这一成就特朗普很可能会在周二的演讲中重点强调。
但特朗普大规模驱逐的承诺仍深陷争议。美国移民和海关执法局(ICE)的突袭行动和执法举措(如”地铁突击行动”)目前尚未导致特朗普在竞选活动中宣称的数百万移民被驱逐。驱逐行动还遭到数百起诉讼,加剧了对这些行动的审查。
一名联邦执法人员在明尼苏达州南明尼阿波利斯的一次突袭行动中站在一户人家外。(Victor J. Blue/Bloomberg via Getty Images)
民主党顾问、众议院司法委员会前首席法律顾问朱利安·爱泼斯坦表示,特朗普”确保了边境安全,但他没有向公众充分解释其驱逐行动的目的和理由。”
特朗普第一任白宫前助理司法部长兼政策官员西奥·沃尔德表示,拜登政府宽松的边境政策相当于”对联邦移民法的犯罪性破坏”,而特朗普已彻底扭转了这一局面。但他承认,关于驱逐行动的争议给政府的移民执法工作蒙上了阴影。
沃尔德说:”驱逐数十万犯罪非法移民的工作仍在继续,这将是一场持续的斗争,因为民主党人试图阻碍移民和海关执法局的进展。但围绕大规模驱逐的持续争议,掩盖了特朗普总统为查明庇护欺诈和确保外国劳工签证不被用来损害美国工人经济流动性而制定的新颖监管规则制定工作。”
爱泼斯坦给特朗普打了A-。
沃尔德给特朗普打了A-。
关税面临法院挫折,但特朗普转向其他策略
特朗普誓言对来自世界各地的进口商品征收高额关税以保护美国制造业。但最高法院裁定,他不能在没有国会批准的情况下单方面以紧急为由实施广泛的关税,这一计划因此受挫。
尽管如此,特朗普还是以不同的法律依据宣布了新一轮10%的全球关税,并表示计划将这一税率提高到15%。
爱泼斯坦说:”他有充分理由收回过去三十年中产阶级的损失,这是他在做一件光荣的事情,但这项政策过于分散,目标不够明确,且向公众解释得不够清楚。”
美国第四季度经济增长慢于预期
唐纳德·特朗普总统展示非对等关税示例。(Mandel Ngan/Getty Images)
保守派《每日信号》编辑布拉德利·德夫林表示,关于特朗普关税政策将引发衰退的末日预测并未成真。
德夫林说:”关税,他们声称会导致经济衰退。但长期以来,美国工人的实际工资首次出现增长。”
爱泼斯坦给特朗普打了B。
德夫林给特朗普打了A。
外交政策处于变化中
在外交政策方面,特朗普多次暗示他可以结束乌克兰战争,但这一承诺尚未实现。然而,特朗普的其他外交努力得到了赞扬。
爱泼斯坦说:”他发动了八场战争,使我们在中东地区远远领先于拜登时期,并通过施压挤出委内瑞拉和古巴的共产主义独裁者,确保西半球的安全。”
反对派领袖玛丽亚·科里娜·马查多在2025年1月9日加拉加斯的反政府抗议活动中发表讲话。(Jesus Vargas/Getty Images)
德夫林表示,特朗普对伊朗发动军事打击的威胁(总统称此举旨在迫使伊朗就其核计划进行谈判)与和平信息不符。
德夫林说:”2024年竞选活动的两个主要外交政策问题——促成俄乌战争停火以及结束中东冲突——仍然难以实现。而且,总统似乎正濒临与伊朗爆发战争,这可能会使美国在其任期结束前从中东撤军的目标难以实现。”
爱泼斯坦给特朗普打了A。
德夫林给特朗普打了C+。
美国经济
经济繁荣是特朗普竞选活动的核心。特朗普誓言缓解通胀并提高国内能源产量。最新政府数据显示,通胀确实有所缓解,但仍是一个令人担忧的问题。
特朗普还指出,2025年7月签署的《美丽大法案》(One Big Beautiful Bill Act)中的减税措施是其议程的成功之处。
爱泼斯坦表示,经济”正在朝着正确的方向发展”,但特朗普尚未完全解决”焦虑公众”的担忧。
共和党全国委员会发言人伊丽莎白·皮普科表示,特朗普任内的经济增长”强劲”。
点击此处获取福克斯新闻应用
皮普科说:”通胀下降,汽油价格大幅下跌,工资上涨,一年来取得的进展远远超出了任何人的预期。”
皮普科给特朗普打了A。
爱泼斯坦给特朗普打了B+。
相关文章
[拜登在明尼苏达州抨击移民镇压,称其违背美国价值观]
阿什利·奥利弗是福克斯新闻数字频道和福克斯商业频道的记者,报道司法部和法律事务。请将新闻线索发送至ashley.oliver@fox.com。
A Democratic and Republican strategist each told Fox News Digital Trump gets an ‘A-‘ on immigration
By Ashley Oliver
Fox News
Published February 24, 2026 10:00am EST
‘The Five’ co-hosts discuss Democrats’ efforts to resist President Donald Trump’s upcoming State of the Union address.
NEW You can now listen to Fox News articles!
Listen to this article
5 min
Ahead of President Donald Trump’s first State of the Union address since returning to the White House, his record on key campaign pledges is mixed, as some promises have been fulfilled while others are still pending or tied up in legal challenges.
Trump’s 2024 campaign centered on immigration, the economy, sweeping tariffs and ending the United States’ involvement in foreign conflicts. More than a year into his second term, Republican and Democratic strategists alike told Fox News Digital the administration has made significant strides in some of those areas but fallen short in others.
Voters, meanwhile, view Trump as weak on the economy (40% approval), foreign policy (37% approval) and tariffs (37% approval), according to a Fox News poll last month. His approval rating is slightly higher on immigration at 44%, and a net positive 52% when it comes to border security.
Border crossings drop, but deportations remain contentious
One of Trump’s top promises was stopping what he described as an “invasion” at the southern border by curbing illegal crossings and pursuing an aggressive deportation agenda.
Department of Homeland Security data since Trump took office shows a sharp decrease in border crossings between ports of entry, an achievement Trump is likely to highlight in Tuesday’s speech.
But Trump’s promise to carry out mass deportations on a historic scale remains mired in controversy. ICE raids and enforcement initiatives, such as Operation Metro Surge, have not at this stage led to the removal of millions that Trump articulated on the campaign trail. Deportations have also been met with hundreds of lawsuits, intensifying scrutiny of them.
A federal law enforcement agent outside a home during a raid in south Minneapolis, Minnesota, on Tuesday, Jan. 13, 2026.(Victor J. Blue/Bloomberg via Getty Images)
Julian Epstein, a Democratic consultant and former chief counsel on the House Judiciary Committee, said Trump has “secured the borders, but he has not explained to the public adequately enough his purpose and rationale on deportation.”
Theo Wold, a former assistant attorney general and policy official in the first Trump White House, said the Biden administration’s lax border policies amounted to a “criminal undermining of federal immigration law” that Trump has completely reversed. But he acknowledged that contention over deportations has clouded the administration’s immigration enforcement efforts.
“The work to remove hundreds of thousands of criminal illegal aliens continues and will be an ongoing fight, as Democrats look to obstruct ICE’s progress,” Wold said. “But the ongoing fight over mass deportations has obscured President Trump’s novel regulatory rulemakings to ferret out asylum fraud and to ensure that foreign labor visas are not wielded to undermine the economic mobility of the American worker.”
Epstein gave Trump an A-.
Wold gave Trump an A-.
Tariffs face court setback, but Trump pivots
Trump vowed to impose steep tariffs on imports from around the world to protect U.S. manufacturing. But that plan took a hit when the Supreme Court ruled that he could not unilaterally impose broad tariffs on an emergency basis without congressional approval.
Undeterred, Trump announced a new set of 10% global tariffs under a different legal authority, and the president has signaled he plans to raise that rate to 15%.
“He has a good reason to claw back the losses of the middle class in the last three decades, that’s an honorable thing that he’s doing, but the policy has been too diffuse, not sufficiently targeted, and poorly explained to the public,” Epstein said.
US ECONOMY GREW SLOWER THAN EXPECTED IN FOURTH QUARTER
President Donald Trump shows off non-reciprocal tariff examples.(Mandel Ngan/Getty Images)
Bradley Devlin, an editor at the conservative Daily Signal, said doomsday predictions about Trump’s tariffs have not panned out.
“Tariffs, they claimed, would cause a recession. But for the first time in a long time, real wages are rising for working Americans,” Devlin said.
Epstein gave Trump a B.
Devlin gave Trump an A.
Foreign policy in flux
On foreign policy, Trump repeatedly suggested he could end the war in Ukraine, but that has not materialized. Trump’s other diplomatic efforts have, however, been met with praise.
“He’s put out eight wars, moved us light years ahead of where Biden was in the Middle East, and is securing the Western Hemisphere by squeezing out the communist dictators in Venezuela and Cuba,” Epstein said.
Opposition leader Maria Corina Machado gestures during an anti-government protest on Jan. 9, 2025, in Caracas, Venezuela(Jesus Vargas/Getty Images)
Devlin said Trump’s threats of military strikes on Iran, which the president has said are aimed at forcing the country to negotiate over its nuclear program, did not jibe with a message of peace.
“Two driving foreign policy issues of the 2024 campaign, brokering peace in the Russia-Ukraine war and an end to the conflict in the Middle East remains elusive,” Devlin said. “And the president seems on the verge of a war with Iran that would likely make an American pivot away from the Middle East unachievable by the end of his term.”
Epstein gave Trump an A.
Devlin gave Trump a C+.
U.S. economy
Central to Trump’s campaign was economic prosperity. Trump vowed to ease inflation and boost domestic energy production. Recent government data show inflation has indeed eased but that it remains a point of concern.
Trump has also pointed to tax cuts enacted under the One Big Beautiful Bill Act, a sweeping tax and spending law signed in July 2025, as a success tied to his agenda.
Epstein said the economy is “headed in the right track” but that Trump has not fully addressed the concerns of an “anxious public.”
Elizabeth Pipko, a Republican National Committee spokesperson, said economic growth under Trump has been “robust.”
CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP
“Inflation has gone down, gas prices have fallen significantly, wages are rising, and the progress made in one year has far surpassed what anyone could have predicted,” Pipko said.
Pipko gave Trump an A.
Epstein gave Trump a B+.
Related Article
[Biden speaks out against immigration crackdown in Minnesota, says it goes against American values]
Ashley Oliver is a reporter for Fox News Digital and FOX Business, covering the Justice Department and legal affairs. Email story tips to ashley.oliver@fox.com.
发表回复