In his first day, President Trump has highlighted some of his key international plans

President Donald Trump has been in office for less than 24 hours and we have already learned more on his international plans.

The newly sworn-in President doubled down on his proposed plans to reclaim the Panama Canal. While the United States handed over control of the canal to Panama in 1999, the 47th President has been largely concerned with China’s presence in the waterway.
The President shared that we did not give it to China. We gave it to Panama, and we’re taking it back.

73% of the traffic that passes through the Panama Canal each day is American. Congressional effort is being backed by Congressman Dusty Johnson to get the ball moving on its acquisition.

President Trump also repeated in his Inaugural Address that he will be changing the name of the Gulf of Mexico to the Gulf of America.
He later followed through on that promise, signing an executive order to change the name.

Florida has since become the first state to adhere to that executive order with an emergency declaration for the state of Florida warning of today’s winter storm referencing the body of water.

While he did not take immediate action to impose his widely discussed 25% tariffs on Canada and Mexico, Reuter’s is reporting action could be taken as soon as February 1st by the new administration.

Related Stories
Riders will retrace more than 1,900 miles of the historic Pony Express route.
OOIDA’s Lewie Pugh discusses a new bipartisan surface transportation bill, industry efforts to address regulatory concerns, investments in truck parking and freight infrastructure, and the outlook for transportation policy.
RealAg Radio’s Shaun Haney discusses the next generation of Canadian agricultural policy, producer priorities, concerns surrounding risk management programs, and what the framework could mean for agriculture on both sides of the border.
President Trump’s appearance in Wisconsin coincides with National Dairy Month, placing additional attention on one of the nation’s leading dairy-producing states.
The DOJ is conducting a criminal antitrust investigation into major beef processors, following years of concern over market concentration.