'He's in the swamp — what he needs is a good machete': Trump's most important supporters say he's still their guy
Donald Trump
Donald Trump

(Donald Trump.Pool/Getty Images)

Jamie Klein had no assumptions that President Donald Trump's first 100 days would be easy.

"I sent him to Washington to kick over the table," Klein said. "That's why I sent him there."

Klein is a 70-year-old delegate from Pennsylvania's 5th district. He is one of the handful of voters who were crucial to Trump's victory, pushing him over the finish line — twice.

Those voters, the Pennsylvania delegates, won seats last summer to the Republican convention in Cleveland, where they were unbound to any candidate as part of a zany state electoral system but ultimately cemented Trump's win at a time when the GOP resistance to him was near a fever pitch.

And in November, they led the charge in the grassroots back in Pennsylvania, working to turn out and raise support for the then-GOP nominee. Perhaps no state was more pivotal to Trump's shocking electoral victory over Democratic presidential nominee Hillary Clinton than Pennsylvania, a 20-electoral vote state that had not gone red since 1988.

One-hundred days into his presidency, these Keystone State voters still see Trump as their guy. Lack of a big legislative achievement? That's on House Speaker Paul Ryan. Events that reflect poorly on the president? They're overhyped by a media that's out to get him. The controversy involving Russia? Phony and overblown.

There's plenty of finger pointing for what went down in the early days of the Trump administration, and almost none of it is directed at the president himself. They are thrilled with his appointment of Justice Neil Gorsuch to the Supreme Court, love the big show of Trump's near-daily signing of executive orders, and looking forward to a big tax cut.

"After four years of this, there will be a lot less federal employees," Klein said. "There will be a lot less debt. There will be a lot more tears. So, I mean, he's in the swamp. What he needs is a good machete. And he seems to have one, and he's whacking away at them."

Trump will return to Pennsylvania on Saturday night for a campaign-style rally on his 100th day in office, speaking to a crowd in Harrisburg far removed from the spectacle of the White House Correspondents' Dinner in Washington, DC, that he refused to attend.

On the Media: 'They lie'

Klein has stopped watching the news. But that's not necessarily a bad thing to him.

"They need problems, they are the establishment, and they lie," he told this Business Insider reporter. "And look, I don't make them lie. They make them lie."

Perhaps no battle between Trump and another entity was more pronounced during the first 100 days of his administration than the war he waged against media outlets — many of which he showered with seemingly unprecedented access to the West Wing. Media outlets were "dishonest" and "failing." At one point, he decried a number of major entities as "the enemy of the American people" and "the opposition party."