Capital punishment " Donald Trump spent $85,000 in submitting the ad across four New York City newspapers. In May 1989, shortly after the
Central Park jogger case received widespread media attention, Trump purchased a
full-page ad in four New York City newspapers with the title "BRING BACK THE DEATH PENALTY!" Five defendants (the "Central Park Five") were
wrongfully convicted in the case and were subsequently
exonerated. By October 2016, Trump still maintained that the Central Park Five were guilty. In December 2015, in a speech accepting the endorsement of the New England Police Benevolent Association, Trump said that "One of the first things I do [if elected President] in terms of
executive order if I win will be to sign a strong, strong statement that will go out to the country, out to the world, that...anybody killing a police officer—death penalty. It's going to happen, O.K.?" However, the president has no authority over these prosecutions as they usually take place in
state court under state law, and
over one-third of U.S. states have already abolished the death penalty. Furthermore, mandatory death sentences are unconstitutional, as held by the
Supreme Court in
Woodson v. North Carolina (1976). and the end of Trump's term, the
federal government executed thirteen people; the first executions since 2002. In this time period, Trump oversaw more federal executions than any president in the preceding 120 years.
Criminal justice As of May 2016, Trump's campaign website made no mention of
criminal justice reform, and Trump rarely talked in specifics. Trump has stated that he would be "tough on crime" and criticized Barack Obama's and Hillary Clinton's criminal justice reform proposals. When asked about specific criminal justice reforms, Trump reportedly often changes the subject back to supporting police or vague answers about needing to be "tough." Trump supports the use of "stop and frisk" tactics, of the kind
once used in New York City. In 2000, Trump also rejected as elitist and naive the arguments of criminal justice reformers that the U.S. criminal justice system puts too many criminals in jail. Trump on several occasions asserted that crime was rising in the United States. Trump's assertions that crime was rising were false; in fact, both violent and property crimes
consistently declined in the U.S. from the early 1990s until 2014. Trump's claim that "inner-city crime is reaching record levels" received a "pants-on-fire" rating from PolitiFact. In May 2016, Trump stated that the cities of
Oakland and
Ferguson are "among the most dangerous in the world". In response,
CBS News in San Francisco reported that the murder rates in Oakland and Baghdad are comparable, but
PolitiFact rated Trump's claim false given that "homicide rates alone are not enough to gauge whether a city is dangerous or not". On November 22, 2015, Trump retweeted a graphic with purported statistics—cited to a nonexistent "Crime Statistics Bureau"—which claimed that
African Americans were responsible for 81% of the homicides of
White Americans and that police were responsible for 1% of black homicides compared to 4% of white homicides. Trump's retweet earned PolitiFact's "Pants on Fire" rating and was called "grossly inaccurate" by FactCheck.org the next day. Blacks were actually responsible for only 15% of white homicides according to FBI data for 2014. At a luncheon hosted by the
Miami Herald in April 1990, Trump told a crowd of 700 people that U.S. drug enforcement policy was "a joke," and that: "We're losing badly the
war on drugs. You have to
legalize drugs to win that war. You have to take the profit away from these drug czars." In his campaign for the presidency in 2015 and 2016, however, Trump adopted "drug warrior" positions Trump told
Sean Hannity in June 2015 that he opposes
marijuana legalization and that "I feel strongly about that." When asked about Colorado (where
recreational use of marijuana is legal), Trump softened his previously expressed views and essentially said that states should be able to decide on whether marijuana for recreational purposes should be legal. The administration organized the
Marijuana Policy Coordination Committee in 2018. In 2024, Trump endorsed decriminalization of marijuana in Florida. On full legalization of marijuana, he suggested it would be inevitable in the state regardless of his personal stance on the issue, and instead advocated regulations restricting its use in public spaces. On Jan. 21, 2025, a day into his second term, Trump pardoned
Ross Ulbricht, the founder of the Silk Road
dark Web marketplace for illegal drugs, including
opioids, such as
fentanyl,
incapacitating agents and other narcotics. During a Dec. 2023 meeting at
Mar-a-Lago,
Angela McArdle, chairwoman of the Libertarian Party, told Trump that "he needed to free Ulbricht if he wanted Libertarian support" for his 2024 campaign.
Gun regulation In his 2000 book
The America We Deserve, Trump wrote that he generally opposed gun control, but supported the
Federal Assault Weapons Ban and supported a "slightly longer
waiting period to purchase a gun." In his book, Trump also criticized the
gun lobby, saying: "The Republicans walk the N.R.A. line and refuse even limited restrictions."
2016 campaign While campaigning for the presidency Trump reversed some of his positions on gun issues, calling for the expansion of gun rights. and said concealed carry "is a right, not a privilege." At his campaign website he called for an overhaul of the
current federal background check system, arguing that "Too many states are failing to put criminal and mental health records into the system." On the campaign trail in 2015, Trump praised the
National Rifle Association of America (NRA), and received the group's endorsement after becoming the presumptive Republican nominee. He asserted that the presence of more guns in schools and public places could have stopped
mass shootings such as those in 2015
in Paris;
in San Bernardino, California; and
at Umpqua Community College. Trump supported barring people on the government's
terrorist watch list from purchasing weapons, saying in 2015: "If somebody is on a watch list and an
enemy of state and we know it's an enemy of state, I would keep them away, absolutely." and that "I carry on occasion, sometimes a lot. I like to be unpredictable." Trump could not eliminate gun-free school zones by executive order, however, since such zones were created by a
federal law that can only be reversed
by Congress. In May 2016, Trump accused Hillary Clinton of lying when she claimed that "Donald Trump would force schools to allow guns in classrooms on his first day in office." According to
The Washington Post fact-checker, Clinton's statement was accurate. In June 2016, Trump said "it would have been a beautiful, beautiful sight" to see
Omar Mateen shot in the head by an armed patron in the
Orlando nightclub shooting, reiterating his stance that more people should be armed in public places. A few days later, after two top officials of the
NRA challenged the notion that drinking clubgoers should be armed, Trump reversed his position, saying that he "obviously" meant that additional guards or employees should have been armed in the nightclub. Security personnel and other staffers at a number of Trump's hotels and golf courses told
ABC News that patrons are not permitted to carry guns on the property. A Trump spokesman denied this, saying that licensed persons are permitted to carry guns on the premises. At a rally on August 9, 2016, Trump accused his opponent of wanting to "essentially abolish the Second Amendment", and went on: "By the way, and if she gets to pick her judges, nothing you can do, folks. Although the Second Amendment people, maybe there is, I don't know." These comments were interpreted by critics as suggesting violence against Clinton or her appointees, but Trump's campaign stated that he was referring to gun rights advocates' "great political power" as a voting bloc.
First presidency (2017–2021) One month after his inauguration, Trump reversed an Obama-era regulation that had been intended to prevent weapons purchases by certain people with mental health problems. Had the regulation been allowed to take effect, it would have added 75,000 names, including the names of those who receive federal financial assistance due to a mental illness or who have financial proxies due to a mental illness, to a background check database. Following the
Stoneman Douglas High School shooting in February 2018, Trump met with students and others at the White House for a "listening session". Trump suggested arming up to 20% of the teachers to stop "maniacs" from attacking students. The following day Trump called a "gun free" school a "magnet" for criminals and tweeted, "Highly trained, gun adept, teachers/coaches would solve the problem instantly, before police arrive. GREAT DETERRENT!" In August 2019, following mass shootings
in El Paso, Texas, and
in Dayton, Ohio, Trump declined to support
universal background checks, saying that existing background checks are already "very, very strong," even though "we have sort of missing areas and areas that don't complete the whole circle." He also indicated that he was not interested in working on bipartisan compromises. In a speech at a 2023 NRA convention, Trump expressed support for national concealed carry reciprocity which would allow a person with a
concealed carry permit in one state to have their permit apply across state lines nationwide.
Judiciary According to
The New York Times, many of Trump's statements on legal topics are "extemporaneous and resist conventional legal analysis," with some appearing "to betray ignorance of fundamental legal concepts." He released a list of eleven potential picks to replace Scalia. The jurists were widely considered to be conservative. All are white, and eight of the eleven are men. However, under the U.S. Constitution, Supreme Court justices "are neither investigators nor prosecutors." He also blamed Roberts for the June 2015
Supreme Court ruling legalizing same-sex marriage, apparently in error, since in that case Roberts actually dissented from the majority opinion. In February 2016, Trump called on the Senate to stop Obama from filling the vacant seat on the Supreme Court. An analysis by
FiveThirtyEight predicted that, under the assumption that Scalia's vacant seat on the Court would not be filled before Trump's presidency, and taking account of the advanced age of three of the sitting justices, that a Trump presidency would move the Supreme Court "rightward toward its most conservative position in recent memory". Trump ultimately appointed three justices to the court:
Neil Gorsuch to replace Scalia,
Brett Kavanaugh to replace
Anthony Kennedy, and
Amy Coney Barrett to replace
Ruth Bader Ginsburg. The appointments of Trump's nominees shifted the court to a strongly conservative position. In the period after Trump left office, the court issued several conservative rulings, including
declaring that the constitution does not protect abortion, in which Trump's appointees contributed to the majority.
Comments on judges and judicial decisions Since taking office, Trump has made a series of "escalating attacks on the
federal judiciary" in response to judicial decisions against him. After a federal district judge,
James Robart, issued a stay of Trump's
executive order on travel, immigration, and refugees, Trump disparaged him on Twitter, referring to him as a "the so-called judge" and writing: "[He] put our country in such peril. If something happens blame him and court system. People pouring in. Bad!" While presidents in the past have sometimes offered muted criticism of judicial opinions, Trump's personal attacks on individual judges are seen as unprecedented in American history. Trump's remarks prompted criticism from his own nominee, Gorsuch, who told Senator
Richard Blumenthal that Trump's statements were "disheartening" and "demoralizing" to the federal judiciary.
Term limits and ethics regulations In October 2016, Trump said that he would push for a constitutional amendment to impose
term limits on members of Congress, so that members of the House of Representatives could serve for a maximum of six years and senators for a maximum of twelve years. Trump also pledged to re-institute a ban on executive branch officials from lobbying for five years after leaving government service and said that he supported Congress instituting a similar five-year lobbying ban of its own, applicable to former members and
staff. Under current "cooling-off period" regulations, former U.S. representatives are required to wait one year before they can lobby Congress, former U.S. senators are required to two years, and former executive-branch officials "must wait either two years or one year before lobbying their former agency, depending on how senior they were."
First Amendment Flag desecration During a rally in June 2020, President Trump told supporters that he thinks
flag burning should be punishable by one year in prison.
Libel During his
2016 presidential campaign, Trump proposed that the United States should "open up" its
libel laws to make it easier to sue newspapers that write "purposely negative and horrible and false articles".
Official language In 2015 during a debate, Trump said, "This is a country where we speak English, not Spanish." In June 2019, Senator
Steve Daines proposed reviving the previously unsuccessful language amendment, and in doing so received the support of the
Trump administration. On March 1, 2025, Trump signed an
executive order designating English as the country's official language.
Video game violence Trump has voiced his opposition to
video game violence. After it was erroneously reported that the
Sandy Hook shooter frequently played violent video games, Trump tweeted, "Video game violence & glorification must be stopped—it is creating monsters!" Following the
Stoneman Douglas shooting event, President Trump arranged to meet with several video game industry professionals on March 8, 2018; in attendance beyond Trump and other Congressmen included Mike Gallagher, the president and CEO of the ESA; Pat Vance, the president of the ESRB; Strauss Zelnick, CEO of
Take Two Interactive, Robert Altman, CEO of
ZeniMax Media;
Brent Bozell, founder of the
Media Research Center; and Melissa Hanson, program manager for the
Parents Television Council. The meeting was not designed to come to a solution but only for the invited parties to present their stance on video games and their relationship to violent activity as to try to determine appropriate steps in the future. At the start of the meeting, the President showed the attendees a short 88-second video of numerous violent video game segments put together by his staff, including the infamous "
No Russian" level from
Call of Duty: Modern Warfare 2, which featured the player watching and potentially participating in a massacre of civilians in an airport. After the
2019 El Paso shooting, Trump said in a speech, "We must stop the glorification of violence in our society. This includes the gruesome and grisly video games that are now commonplace. It is too easy today for troubled youth to surround themselves with a culture that celebrates violence. We must stop or substantially reduce this and it has to begin immediately."
Online gambling Trump supports
online gambling, based on the following reasoning: "This has to happen because many other countries are doing it and like usual the U.S. is just missing out."
Pardons Trump has said multiple times that if he were
reelected in 2024, he would
pardon participants in the
January 6 United States Capitol attack. On January 20, 2025, Upon assuming the presidency again, Trump issued roughly
1,500 pardons and 14 commutations to people charged in connection to the
January 6 United States Capitol attack. ==Science and technology==