Trump Holds Cabinet Meeting After 100 Days in Office: 5 Things to Know

The meeting focused on the economy, immigration, and court rulings, in part.

President Donald Trump held a Cabinet meeting on Wednesday as his administration marked 100 days in office while touting his record on immigration and the economy.

Meanwhile, the Department of Commerce released a report showing that U.S. gross domestic product in the first quarter of 2025 declined by 0.3 percent from the last quarter of 2024.

Earlier in the day, Trump wrote in a Truth Social post that people should “be patient” and wait for his policies, including on tariffs, to play out.

China ‘Doing Very Poorly,’ Trump Says

Trump said that the Chinese economy is “doing very poorly right now” and made note of recent economic data that showed China’s factory activity declining.

“At a certain point, I hope we’re going to make a deal with China. We’re talking to China,” Trump said. The Chinese regime, however, has said that it is not engaged in talks with the Trump administration.

Earlier this month, Trump imposed 145 percent tariffs on Chinese imports, which led to Beijing issuing its own duties of 125 percent on U.S. products.

The Trump administration said that it raised the duties on China because the regime opted to retaliate after Trump’s initial announcement to place reciprocal tariffs on major U.S. trading partners. Other than China, Trump later announced a 90-day pause on the higher tariffs.

In the meeting, Trump also knocked the longstanding de minimis exemption on duties that was exploited by companies such as Temu and Shein, which rely on the loophole to export Chinese products into the United States.

“It’s very important, de minimis,” the president said, describing it as a “scam” that has harmed small American companies. “We put an end to it.”

The de minimis policy that Trump reversed recently used to allow certain shipments from China or Hong Kong to enter the United States duty-free. Earlier this month, Trump signed an executive order to close the de minimis loophole starting May 2.

Trump Reiterates Tax Cuts Plan

Also in the Cabinet meeting, Trump praised GOP-led efforts to pass a bill on taxes through Congress that he said will result in the largest tax cut in U.S. history.

Trump said that both Republican congressional leaders, Senate Majority Leader John Thune (R-SD) and House Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.), have led a “unified attack” to get the bill passed.

“We have to attack because the Democrats are trying to stop it at every turn. It would mean a 58 percent tax hike if they were successful and lots of other bad things beyond the tax hike, but with us, it’ll be the biggest tax cut in American history,” the president said.

Also in the meeting, Trump said that the decline in the GDP in the first quarter is, in part, due to policies initiated under the Biden administration.

“I have to start off by saying, that’s [former President Joe] Biden, that’s not Trump,“ the president said. ”Because we came in in January, these are quarterly numbers, and we came in, and I was very against everything that Biden was doing in terms of the economy.”

This month, Trump also announced a baseline 10 percent tariff for nearly every country, along with the initial higher reciprocal tariffs that were paused a week later.

The president has also announced 25 percent tariffs on auto imports and kept in place earlier tariffs of 25 percent on Mexican and Canadian imports.

Elon Musk Present at Meeting

Elon Musk, a senior presidential adviser who is the driving force behind the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE), was seen at the Cabinet meeting wearing a “Gulf of America” cap.

Trump said that Musk is invited to stay in his administration indefinitely, as the billionaire is expected to soon return to focusing on his companies, Tesla and SpaceX.

“You’re invited to stay as long as you want,” Trump said, adding that Musk had been “treated unfairly” for his role in helping Trump slash the size and scope of the federal government. “You really have sacrificed a lot.”

But she said that Musk-associated officials, including those working with DOGE, will remain in the White House.

Last week, Musk said during a Tesla investor call that he would be stepping away from the government in May, after the company posted lower-than-expected profits and net revenue for the first quarter of 2025.

As a special government employee, Musk has to leave the government within 130 days of beginning his role there.

Trump Talks ‘Judge Problems’

The president also responded to recent court rulings that have blocked his agenda on immigration, including orders to block his administration’s efforts to deport alleged gang members.

“We’re expelling these monsters from our country rapidly and working with the Department of Justice,” Trump said, referring to the gang members.

While speaking to Attorney General Pam Bondi, Trump added, “We’re having some judge problems, and everybody’s reading some judges that don’t like killers, murderers being thrown out of the country.”

Perhaps the most notable deportation-related case involves Kilmar Abrego Garcia, an accused MS-13 gang member who was deported to El Salvador. The Supreme Court this month ruled that the government must facilitate the return of Abrego Garcia.

Meanwhile, several courts have ruled to block Trump’s executive order that would have limited birthright citizenship, as well as his decision to invoke the Alien Enemies Act of 1798 to deport gang members.

“I don’t know what their problem is, but we have little difficulty,” Trump said of the judges who have ruled against his decisions.

The president did not refer to the FBI’s arrest of a judge in Milwaukee last week after she allegedly helped an illegal immigrant evade federal agents, or to the former judge who was arrested in New Mexico for allegedly harboring an accused Tren de Aragua gang member.

Vance Says Media Focused on Wrong Priorities

In the meeting, Vice President JD Vance targeted the media, which he said was fixated on the wrong priorities during Trump’s first 100 days.

Vance pointed to a rise in military recruitment numbers that he said the press should focus on, rather than other stories, such as the case of Abrego Garcia.

“Why is it that the press is so focused on the fake B.S., rather than what’s really going on in the country?” Vance asked.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

Original News Source Link – Epoch Times

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