- United States
- Letter
Accountability: Discrepancies Between Executive Policies and Documented Facts
To: Pres. Trump
From: A verified voter in Columbus, OH
March 23
I am writing to express concern regarding the divergence between administration rhetoric and documented facts. The current actions from this administration are at best prioritizing short-term optics over long-term national stability, and at worst are deeply corrupt behavior.
1. Foreign Policy and Market Integrity (Iran)
Your announcement 3/23 regarding "productive conversations" with Iran is being openly refuted by both regional allies and the Iranian government itself. Most troubling are reports that these unsubstantiated claims are being used to deliberately manipulate global oil and financial markets. When the executive branch issues "breakthrough" updates that are immediately negated by the involved parties, it creates a volatility that suggests either a catastrophic intelligence failure or a coordinated attempt to influence market pricing for private or political gain. This is unacceptable, and Americans deserve better than this.
2. Fiscal Reality and the 2026 Deficit
While the administration promotes Public Law 119-21 (the One Big Beautiful Bill Act) as a victory for the American worker, the Congressional Budget Office (CBO) February 2026 report tells a different story. The federal deficit is projected to hit $1.9 trillion this fiscal year, with national debt reaching 101% of GDP. By making the 2017 tax cuts permanent without offsetting spending cuts, you have placed the nation on an unprecedented fiscal path that threatens the value of the American dollar. Americans deserve better than this.
3. Legislative Mismanagement (The SAVE Act)
The continued prioritization of the SAVE Act remains a waste of legislative time. The Heritage Foundation’s own Election Fraud Database continues to show that non-citizen voting is statistically non-existent (representing less than 0.0001% of votes cast). Adding hoops for millions of voters to jump through in order to solve a problem that doesn't exist? Americans deserve better than this.
Vague assurances are no longer sufficient when the data—from the CBO to regional allies—points to a different reality. I look forward to a detailed response that addresses these specific evidentiary gaps and outlines a return to fact-based governance.