I am curious what the specific line is for everyone. Mine is simple, if he does decrease government and does not violate the Constitution in implementing his promises. I'll be glad to say I was wrong, especially the latter part as it is the most important (not violating the Constitution).
I wonder what the line is for the other side. What signature issue would he need to backtrack on for their to admit they were wrong about him or will there always be an excuse because the personality trumps the principle?
We've already seen him backtrack on 'the establishment', he has moved left on Student loans, and he has started to backtrack on Obamacare and the Iran deal. What if he continues down this path?
What's the line?
Well, some of it is right here:
http://www.gopbriefingroom.com/index.php/topic,233460.msg1113434 In the first post and post 27 and scattered in the thread are the promises Trump made on the Campaign trail.
I'll use his own standard to judge by. He said it, he established it, either he will do it or he won't. While there are things in there I pray he does not accomplish, those are the things he said he'd do.
Nowadays, people expect politicians to lie to them, and despite being told Trump is a businessman (whom I would expect honesty from, or I would not conduct business with them), by now he certainly is a politician. Still, after months of being told how great he is because he is going to do these things, I expect those promises to be fulfilled.
I'm not imposing any Conservative standards on him other than I expect him to fully follow his oath of office and the Constitution of the United States. Those promises, though are all his. The more he breaks, the more he justifies my lack of support during the campaign.
Incidentally, I'm glad that felonious bitch didn't get in, too.