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One hundred days into Donald Trumpโ€™s second presidential term, his administration faces mounting criticism over economic policy, civil rights rollbacks, and an increasingly authoritarian approach to governance. 

A new report from Americans for Tax Fairness (ATF) shows that Trumpโ€™s aggressive tariff agenda has already cost American households an additional $14 billion.

The Bureau of Economic Analysis reported that taxes on foreign imports soared to $96.3 billion in the first quarter of 2025, up 17% from last year. Americans for Tax Fairness concluded that under Trumpโ€™s current plan, the effective tax rate on all imported goods will reach 18% by yearโ€™s end. 

Without changes in consumer purchasing patterns, the rate could rise to 28%, the highest since 1901.

โ€œThese are just the first effects of Trumpโ€™s reckless and regressive tariffs โ€” the beginning of higher costs that families will face due to the presidentโ€™s incompetent trade policies and to fund his tax giveaway to billionaires,โ€ said David Kass, executive director of ATF. โ€œThis is not about protecting American workers โ€” itโ€™s about shifting the burden to those least able to afford it.โ€

An ATF analysis of income data shows the burden is falling hardest on working-class Americans. The bottom 60% of earners, who collectively take home about one-fifth of national income, are absorbing nearly one-third of the new tariff costs. Meanwhile, the top 1% of income earners โ€” those making over $940,000 annually โ€” will account for just one-tenth of the tariff burden despite receiving more than 20% of national income.

Trump has proposed replacing income taxes with tariff revenue. While corporate tax rates have continued to fall, the Yale Budget Lab now estimates that corporations are paying a lower effective tax rate than American consumers through tariffs for the first time in nearly a century.

The approach mirrors the economic structure of the Gilded Age, an era Trump has praised publicly. During that time, poverty affected more than 70% of the population, and there were no federal income or corporate taxes to support public services.

Outrage over Trumpโ€™s policies sparked protests in Washington on Tuesday. More than 200 people shut down morning rush hour traffic for over two hours. Demonstrators blocked intersections and demanded an end to what they called โ€œ100 days of disaster.โ€

Eight people were arrested.

โ€œFor 100 days, Trump, Musk, and their billionaire friends have stripped away our fundamental freedoms โ€” abducting our neighbors, cracking down on political dissidents, and attempting to erase trans people from existence,โ€ said organizer Ella Weber. โ€œIn this moment, our choice is clear: courage or compliance. Weโ€™ve made our decision โ€” join us.โ€

Olivia DiNucci of CODEPINK said the administration is funneling taxpayer money into militarism and foreign conflict while cutting essential services. 

โ€œOn Trumpโ€™s 100th day of disaster, we see 100 more days of death and destruction for the people of Gaza,โ€ she asserted. โ€œWhile social services are gutted, billions to Israel and a trillion-dollar Pentagon budget surge expose the hypocrisy.โ€

Thomas Mande of Jews Against Fascism denounced the administrationโ€™s immigration crackdown. 

โ€œFor 100 days, Donald Trump, Tom Homan, and Stephen Miller have taken a wrecking ball to our freedoms to enact a xenophobic campaign of mass extrajudicial detentions and deportations,โ€ Mande said. โ€œOur tradition commands us: โ€˜You must not stand idly by as your neighbor bleeds.โ€™โ€

Sunrise Movement DCโ€™s Alejandro Sobrera said working-class Americans suffer as the wealthy grow richer.

โ€œThis administration continues to line the pockets of billionaires while selling out working-class people and our planet. CEOs responsible for climate destruction are profiting while our communities face the fallout,โ€ Sobrera offered.

Free DCโ€™s Alex Dodds and Metro DC DSAโ€™s Marli Kasdan issued a joint statement criticizing the administrationโ€™s disregard for District residents.

โ€œSpeaker Johnson and the capitalist class are focused on a political agenda thatโ€™s harming workers, students, immigrants, and older Americans,โ€ Dodds remarked. โ€œItโ€™s about to cost D.C. communities $1.1 billion. We are choosing courage over compliance.โ€

The Rev. Al Sharpton, founder and president of the National Action Network, said Trumpโ€™s first 100 days represent a sweeping attack on civil rights and equity.

โ€œDonald Trump has signed more than 140 executive orders, including actions to gut diversity in federal government, bully the private sector to do the same, erase Black history, erode police accountability, and attack our LGBTQ+ loved ones,โ€ Sharpton said. โ€œSimply put, Donald Trumpโ€™s first 100 days are Project 2025 in motion.โ€

Sharpton warned that Trumpโ€™s policies are pushing Black businesses, college graduates, and workers to the margins.

โ€œTrump may have executive orders. He may have the House and the Senate. He may have a conservative Supreme Court that will stand idly by even when he defies their orders,โ€ he demanded. โ€œBut he does not control our dollars. He cannot stop us from marching. So NAN will march on Wall Street this August 28 to send a message to Corporate America and financial institutions that our buying power cannot be ignored.โ€

The Not Above the Law coalition, a network of more than 150 advocacy, legal, and policy organizations, has tracked what it calls Trumpโ€™s dismantling of constitutional governance. The coalition cited the administrationโ€™s refusal to follow a Supreme Court order to return a Maryland man unlawfully deported to El Salvador. 

It also noted Trumpโ€™s use of executive orders to instruct the Justice Department to investigate political opponents, sweeping pardons for January 6 rioters and political allies, the arrest of a Milwaukee judge as part of a campaign to intimidate the judiciary, and retaliatory actions against universities, law firms, and nonprofits.

Sharpton and others say the resistance is far from over. 

โ€œWe have come too far, heard too many commitments, and proved our case for success to go back now,” Sharpton assured.

Stacy M. Brown is a senior writer for The Washington Informer and the senior national correspondent for the Black Press of America. Stacy has more than 25 years of journalism experience and has authored...

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