Trump's Second Term: Expanding Powers, Foreign Tensions, and Domestic Unrest Define Pivotal Year

January 20, 2026
Trump's Second Term: Expanding Powers, Foreign Tensions, and Domestic Unrest Define Pivotal Year
  • The second term marks a busy, contentious year as Trump expands presidential powers and reshapes U.S. foreign relations, signaling a hard-edged approach to national interests.

  • This hardline trajectory raises concerns about the health of American democracy and the durability of U.S. alliances, making the current year pivotal for democratic norms and international standing.

  • Transatlantic strains and potential trade tensions with Europe emerge, tied to Greenland actions and tariff policies.

  • The government introduces a Gold Card visa program allowing $1 million in donations for residency, provoking protests and civil unrest including incidents like a shooting involving an ICE agent in Minneapolis.

  • Some policies face court blocks, while ICE-related deaths rise in 2025-2026 due to various causes.

  • Global partners such as Congo and Ukraine seek alignment with U.S. interests for resources or security, though such partnerships are not guaranteed to endure.

  • Democrats remain fragmented after 2024 losses, facing the challenge of unifying around democracy protection and affordability, with midterm elections anticipated but not until late 2026.

  • Internal GOP tensions surface as Epstein-related disclosures complicate support, with dissent within MAGA and scrutiny over transparency after Trump signed a bill to release records.

  • domestically focused DOGE initiative under Elon Musk aimed at cost-cutting led to large-scale federal workforce reductions and the absorption of functions into the State Department.

  • Tariffs and foreign aid shifts boosted revenue but influenced consumer prices, with eggs trending down while beef and coffee rose, prompting stabilization measures.

  • Trump used private messages as supposed evidence from world leaders to push Greenland annexation, releasing screenshots ahead of Davos, fueling international tensions.

  • Pressure on Congress and institutions, including clashes with a Republican Congress, Supreme Court tensions, and attempts to influence Federal Reserve board governance.

Summary based on 18 sources


Get a daily email with more World News stories

More Stories