The Next 100 Days: A Path to a Successful 200
By Jason S. Arnold – Candidate for Governor, New York (JSA2026)
April 30, 2025 | (516) 586-0660 | jaysarnold@icloud.com | www.JSA2026.com
Let’s talk about the next 100 days.
Not for me—but for them.
For the administration in Washington that still has a window—however narrow—to course correct.
Whether you voted for this President or not, we are all passengers on the same ship. And right now, the waters are rough.
But it’s not too late.
If the current administration wants to end its first 200 days of 2025 with any claim to success, it must use the next 100 days to deliver results—not reactions.
What the White House Needs to Do—Starting Now
1. Get Ahead of Inflation with Bold Energy Moves
Gas and utility prices are still crushing working Americans.
Open domestic energy projects and unleash innovation-focused subsidies for small-scale nuclear, hydrogen, and geothermal. Don’t just talk green—go clean and cheap.
2. Enforce the Border Without the Political Theater
End the crisis at the border. Secure it with a balanced mix of enforcement and humane reform.
Americans want borders without cruelty—and compassion without chaos. The administration must make real, bipartisan progress now or face voter backlash later.
3. Show Up for Small Business
Amazon doesn’t need help. Main Street does.
The next 100 days should focus on slashing red tape, offering microgrants, and lowering federal business tax rates on operations under $5 million in annual revenue.
This is how you revive downtowns—not with DEI contracts, but with clear capital and clean code.
4. End the Silence on Crime and Urban Decay
Blue cities are bleeding.
The President must acknowledge the problem and fund federal-local crime partnerships that allow police to restore public order while community groups rebuild trust.
Avoiding the topic isn't compassion—it’s cowardice.
5. Announce a National Mental Health Surge Plan
We are in a quiet crisis. From veterans to teenagers, from urban homelessness to rural suicide—this country is mentally unwell.
The federal government should launch a full-scale national mental health surge, including grants for mobile crisis units, AI-assisted triage lines, and school-based counseling services.
Make it bipartisan. Make it urgent.
Final Word: The 200-Day Mark Is a Legacy Test
A hundred days ago, this administration was handed a chance to restart.
The next 100 days are where legacy is defined.
The polls are unstable. The public is frustrated.
But momentum can be built—if real leadership replaces slogans, and deliverables replace distractions.
We don’t need a “campaign pivot.”
We need a competence pivot.
Why This Matters to You
Because if they don’t step up, we will.
States like New York must be prepared to lead where Washington fails. That’s why my platform—JSA2026—is based on real outcomes, not recycled rhetoric.
We’re ready to move from protest to policy.
To be the example, not the echo.
Let’s make the next 100 days BETTR—for all of us.
Jason S. Arnold
Candidate for Governor – New York
Campaign Site: www.JSA2026.com
Social: @jaynation4547
Support Our Work: www.bettrsm.com
(516) 586-0660
jaysarnold@icloud.com
By Jason S. Arnold – Candidate for Governor, New York (JSA2026)
April 30, 2025 | (516) 586-0660 | jaysarnold@icloud.com | www.JSA2026.com
Let’s talk about the next 100 days.
Not for me—but for them.
For the administration in Washington that still has a window—however narrow—to course correct.
Whether you voted for this President or not, we are all passengers on the same ship. And right now, the waters are rough.
But it’s not too late.
If the current administration wants to end its first 200 days of 2025 with any claim to success, it must use the next 100 days to deliver results—not reactions.
What the White House Needs to Do—Starting Now
1. Get Ahead of Inflation with Bold Energy Moves
Gas and utility prices are still crushing working Americans.
Open domestic energy projects and unleash innovation-focused subsidies for small-scale nuclear, hydrogen, and geothermal. Don’t just talk green—go clean and cheap.
2. Enforce the Border Without the Political Theater
End the crisis at the border. Secure it with a balanced mix of enforcement and humane reform.
Americans want borders without cruelty—and compassion without chaos. The administration must make real, bipartisan progress now or face voter backlash later.
3. Show Up for Small Business
Amazon doesn’t need help. Main Street does.
The next 100 days should focus on slashing red tape, offering microgrants, and lowering federal business tax rates on operations under $5 million in annual revenue.
This is how you revive downtowns—not with DEI contracts, but with clear capital and clean code.
4. End the Silence on Crime and Urban Decay
Blue cities are bleeding.
The President must acknowledge the problem and fund federal-local crime partnerships that allow police to restore public order while community groups rebuild trust.
Avoiding the topic isn't compassion—it’s cowardice.
5. Announce a National Mental Health Surge Plan
We are in a quiet crisis. From veterans to teenagers, from urban homelessness to rural suicide—this country is mentally unwell.
The federal government should launch a full-scale national mental health surge, including grants for mobile crisis units, AI-assisted triage lines, and school-based counseling services.
Make it bipartisan. Make it urgent.
Final Word: The 200-Day Mark Is a Legacy Test
A hundred days ago, this administration was handed a chance to restart.
The next 100 days are where legacy is defined.
The polls are unstable. The public is frustrated.
But momentum can be built—if real leadership replaces slogans, and deliverables replace distractions.
We don’t need a “campaign pivot.”
We need a competence pivot.
Why This Matters to You
Because if they don’t step up, we will.
States like New York must be prepared to lead where Washington fails. That’s why my platform—JSA2026—is based on real outcomes, not recycled rhetoric.
We’re ready to move from protest to policy.
To be the example, not the echo.
Let’s make the next 100 days BETTR—for all of us.
Jason S. Arnold
Candidate for Governor – New York
Campaign Site: www.JSA2026.com
Social: @jaynation4547
Support Our Work: www.bettrsm.com
(516) 586-0660
jaysarnold@icloud.com
πΊπΈ The Next 100 Days: A Path to a Successful 200
By Jason S. Arnold – Candidate for Governor, New York (JSA2026)
π April 30, 2025 | π (516) 586-0660 | π§ jaysarnold@icloud.com | π www.JSA2026.com
Let’s talk about the next 100 days.
Not for me—but for them.
For the administration in Washington that still has a window—however narrow—to course correct.
Whether you voted for this President or not, we are all passengers on the same ship. And right now, the waters are rough.
But it’s not too late.
If the current administration wants to end its first 200 days of 2025 with any claim to success, it must use the next 100 days to deliver results—not reactions.
π§ What the White House Needs to Do—Starting Now
1. Get Ahead of Inflation with Bold Energy Moves
Gas and utility prices are still crushing working Americans.
Open domestic energy projects and unleash innovation-focused subsidies for small-scale nuclear, hydrogen, and geothermal. Don’t just talk green—go clean and cheap.
2. Enforce the Border Without the Political Theater
End the crisis at the border. Secure it with a balanced mix of enforcement and humane reform.
Americans want borders without cruelty—and compassion without chaos. The administration must make real, bipartisan progress now or face voter backlash later.
3. Show Up for Small Business
Amazon doesn’t need help. Main Street does.
The next 100 days should focus on slashing red tape, offering microgrants, and lowering federal business tax rates on operations under $5 million in annual revenue.
This is how you revive downtowns—not with DEI contracts, but with clear capital and clean code.
4. End the Silence on Crime and Urban Decay
Blue cities are bleeding.
The President must acknowledge the problem and fund federal-local crime partnerships that allow police to restore public order while community groups rebuild trust.
Avoiding the topic isn't compassion—it’s cowardice.
5. Announce a National Mental Health Surge Plan
We are in a quiet crisis. From veterans to teenagers, from urban homelessness to rural suicide—this country is mentally unwell.
The federal government should launch a full-scale national mental health surge, including grants for mobile crisis units, AI-assisted triage lines, and school-based counseling services.
Make it bipartisan. Make it urgent.
π― Final Word: The 200-Day Mark Is a Legacy Test
A hundred days ago, this administration was handed a chance to restart.
The next 100 days are where legacy is defined.
π The polls are unstable. The public is frustrated.
But momentum can be built—if real leadership replaces slogans, and deliverables replace distractions.
We don’t need a “campaign pivot.”
We need a competence pivot.
π‘ Why This Matters to You
Because if they don’t step up, we will.
States like New York must be prepared to lead where Washington fails. That’s why my platform—JSA2026—is based on real outcomes, not recycled rhetoric.
We’re ready to move from protest to policy.
To be the example, not the echo.
Let’s make the next 100 days BETTR—for all of us.
π Jason S. Arnold
Candidate for Governor – New York
Campaign Site: www.JSA2026.com
Social: @jaynation4547
Support Our Work: www.bettrsm.com
π (516) 586-0660
π§ jaysarnold@icloud.com
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