With just one week left until his presidency reaches the 100-day milestone, Donald Trump has very little to show for it. A push to repeal and replace Obamacare died before it came to a vote; an attempt to fight terrorism was deemed unconstitutional by the courts; and a series of White House leaks led to frenzied media reports about the factionalism tearing the West Wing apart. It took Trump dropping bombs on multiple countries—deploying the largest non-nuclear explosive in the U.S. arsenal in one and risking a new war in another—to temporarily divert America’s attention from the Russia investigation that had already claimed the scalp of former national security adviser Michael Flynn.

As a similar alpha-male television character once believed, if you don’t like what’s being said, change the conversation. Or at least try to get out ahead of it. And that’s what Trump did on Friday morning:

Ironically, this was a conversation that Trump himself had started before he even won the presidency. During a campaign stop in Pennsylvania last October, Trump promised to put forth a constitutional amendment to place term limits on members of Congress, institute lobbying bans, renegotiate NAFTA, pass tax reform, begin construction on the wall, undo Barack Obama’s executive orders protecting undocumented immigrants, and unleash a tidal wave of regulatory cuts—all in his first 100 days. (One could joke that Trump has promised the moon to American citizens, except he literally did promise to put Americans back on the moon by 2020.)

As CNN’s Jake Tapper pointed out, the 100-day standard has been around since the time of Franklin Delano Roosevelt. “It’s when a president’s power and influence with Congress is likely greatest,” he tweeted. “Comparing anyone to F.D.R. is a fool’s errand, of course.” He then tweeted links to several promises Trump made about what he would accomplish in his first 100 days in office.

So far, according to Gallup, Trump has the lowest average polling for a president’s first quarter since World War II, and the lowest amount of support from an opposition party ever.