fbpx
| Imperial Moment |
The new president has a Day One pen — here’s how he’ll wield it

Many of President-Elect Donald Trump’s promises on the campaign trail were presaged with the words “on day one.”

He vowed from the very start to deport every illegal immigrant and close the borders; to roll back the woke policies imposed during the Biden administration; to revive fossil fuel production; to slap tariffs on imports; to lift environmental regulations he says are smothering the economy; and to “drain the swamp” in Washington and transform the “deep state.”

While these pledges were couched in Mr. Trump’s signature hyperbole, in many cases, they give an accurate summary of his agenda.

In recent decades, it has become increasingly common for newly inaugurated presidents to mark their Oval Office entrance by signing a slew of executive orders undoing the policies of their predecessors and paving the way for their new administrations. President Joe Biden signed 17 executive orders on his first day in office. Mr. Trump’s transition team has been laser-focused on having personnel and policy ready to go, to help the president-elect beat Washington’s political clock and avoid the policy chaos that marked much of his first term.

Whichever party is out of power typically criticizes the new president’s liberal use of executive action, which is a way of quickly enacting rules and regulations without going through the hoops of the legislative process. But as polarization makes wins in Congress increasingly difficult, this route has been used more and more.

Mishpacha spoke with experts familiar with and sympathetic to the incoming administration’s thinking to glean a better picture of what Mr. Trump is planning for day one.

Excerpted from Mishpacha Magazine. To view full version, SUBSCRIBE FOR FREE or LOG IN.

Oops! We could not locate your form.