And while health-care reform is the most obvious canary in the coal mine for Trump failing to deliver on taxes, all of his administration’s failures lately appear to be compounding. Where investors once saw a group of political trailblazers ready to smash the status quo, they are now beginning to wonder whether they were just watching a bunch of incompetent neophytes talking a big game without a clue.

“Trump’s ability to get things done will stay at the forefront of investors’ minds,” Northern Trust Wealth Management’s Katie Nixon told The Wall Street Journal. “Every program, whether it’s the Affordable Care Act or the travel ban, is being interpreted as information in how successful he’ll be in getting his bigger strategies enacted. If Republicans can’t coalesce around the Affordable Care Act, can they do it around tax reform?”

Republican Rep. Bill Flores, for one, sounds worried. “If we are not able to move forward with health-care reform, it endangers tax reform,” the former chair of a House conservative caucus told Bloomberg in an interview Friday, dumping cold water on hopes for an easy legislative push. “The folks that were able to tear this down would feel like they’re empowered to tear the next big project down.”

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Goldman Sachs wants to bring that Goldman magic to the masses

Goldman Sachs has been lending so many employees to the Trump administration, it’s apparently running out of staff. Which is where you come in! Want to help America’s most Trump-connected bank bring investing advice to the poor schmucks of the world (i.e., the investment-banking equivalent of missionary work)? Apply today!

The job posting for employees to help build the platform (See the job ad here) comes as Goldman is looking at ways to broaden its customer base outside the super wealthy, including making deeper inroads into new consumer-focused businesses.