President Trump formally announced to a crowd in Orlando Tuesday night he is running for re-election in 2020 and appeared to embrace the new campaign slogan “Keep America Great.”

His supporters cheered him at televised watch parties from coast to coast. They are girding their loins for a major fight with whoever the Democrats nominate to challenge him next year.

Trump approaches this race with abundant strengths. But he needs a better slogan.

TRUMP LAUNCHES 2020 RE-ELECTION BID IN JAM-PACKED ORLANDO ARENA

Trump’s 2016 motto was as good as they come. “Make America Great Again” inspired some 63 million people to look past eight years of stagnation, weakness, and self-flagellation under President Barack Obama. Instead, these voters heeded Trump’s call to imagine America as it was as recently as the 1980s – a vibrant, optimistic, forward-looking, free-market superpower.

In just under two-and-a-half years, President Trump has delivered on this broad promise and fulfilled scores of specific pledges. Even his foes must admit that the man actually has done most of what he said he would do. For example:

Thanks to unprecedented deregulation and the biggest tax cut in U.S. history, 90 percent of wage earners are enjoying higher take-home pay, Gross domestic product growth hums along at 3.1 percent, far outrunning the escargot-like pace of Obama’s expansion.

Unemployment is at 3.6 percent, with record or near-historic-low joblessness for blacks, Hispanics, women, and Americans without college degrees.

“U.S. Job Openings Outnumber Unemployed by Widest Gap Ever,” read a June 10 headline in The Wall Street Journal. The subhead is fresh from the Good Problems to Have Department: “Even though employers are hungry for workers, the supply of prospective employees is shrinking.” Incredibly, more than 7.4 million open jobs in April chased 5.8 million jobseekers. So there are about 1.6 million more help-wanted signs than available helpers. This is the Donald Trump difference.

Average hourly earnings in May, versus a year earlier, were up 3.1 percent. Everyday Americans finally are getting the raises for which they so patiently waited.

President Trump has placed 119 constitutionalists on the federal bench, as of last week. These include two Supreme Court justices, 41 circuit court jurists and 76 district court judges.

Overseas, ISIS’ territorial caliphate has been erased. NATO members are honoring their commitments and paying more of their fair share for the West’s collective defense. An emboldened U.S. is negotiating peace and prosperity with North Korea and China. Mexico, Canada, and South Korea are among the nations that have completed commercial agreements with President Trump’s trade team.

Largely due to Democratic intransigence, some promises have yet to be kept. ObamaCare’s repeal and replacement awaits, although the individual-mandate tax is dead, and Team Trump has expanded patient-choice options.

The southern-border wall is a work in progress, with 45 miles reinforced so far. Thanks to the group We Build the Wall, privately funded barriers are being erected on private property. But miles remain before America’s underbelly resembles rock-hard abs rather than beer-fueled paunch.

Perhaps to summarize this, President Trump told the crowd at his announcement that he now likes the slogan “Keep America Great.” The sooner he abandons it, the better.

Perhaps to summarize this, President Trump told the crowd at his announcement that he now likes the slogan “Keep America Great.” The sooner he abandons it, the better.

Keep America Great is not an appeal to acceleration. It’s a call for stasis.

Keep America Great says, in so many words: “Well, folks, we did it. Here we are. This is as good as it gets. Please vote for me and the GOP, and we will tread water for four years. Come 2024, things will look pretty much like this.”

This is neither inspiring nor aspirational. At most, it’s self-congratulatory. “We’ve earned our laurels. Now, let’s sit on them.”

Here is a far better slogan: “Make America Even Greater.”

“Make” challenges every American to get involved and help President Trump accomplish something. “Keep” says that this something has been achieved and merely needs maintenance, like watering a plant. Americans should manufacture, not just maintain.

“Greater” recognizes that some level of advancement has been achieved. This acknowledges the promises that Trump has kept and, thus, the improvements that most Americans are enjoying.

“Even Greater” underscores the unfinished agenda. “Folks, this is not the end of the road. We’re less than halfway there. Please vote for me and the GOP, and happier days will follow.”

Make America Even Greater tells voters: “America is in better shape than when Trump arrived, but there is plenty more to do. So, let’s get busy.”

Rather than tread water with “Keep America Great,” voters should swim energetically ahead and “Make America Even Greater.”

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“Whether it’s four years or, hopefully, it’s eight years,” President Trump recently told ABC News’ George Stephanopoulos, “I still have work to do.”

President Trump should run for re-election on a slogan that tells voters that the best is yet to come. That battle cry is: Make America Even Greater.

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