Before he even took office, Donald Trump was bragging about his presidency’s benefit to American consumers. “Thanks Donald!” he tweeted in December, after consumer confidence hit a 15-year high. On Monday, the president marked National Consumer Protection Week by touting “the importance of empowering consumers by helping them to more capably identify and report cyber scams, monitor their online privacy and security, and make well-informed decisions.”

“Our work to protect consumers from identity theft, abuse of personal information, and fraud, and to improve the integrity and security of our marketplaces, enhances the prosperity of our great country,” he said in a presidential proclamation.

But early in his presidency, Trump has already rolled out a plethora of policies that will hurt American consumers.

Late last week, his administration shelved two proposed Obama-era rules on airlines: one requiring baggage fees to be posted alongside airfare, the other requesting information about how airlines market flights on comparison websites like Kayak and Expedia (the concern being that visitors to those sites don’t see all available fares). Airlines for America, a trade association and lobbying group for the major airlines, applauded the decision.

As Gabrielle Bluestone wrote for VICE News on Monday, “the Trump administration recently eliminated or proposed eliminating a host of consumer protections, from a requirement that users opt in before cable and telecommunications companies are allowed to sell their web browsing data to advertisers, to a rule that would have required financial advisors to make decisions in the best interests of their clients.”