
President-elect Donald Trump has taken more than 200 executive actions since taking office on Monday, according to a New York Post report. “To clean up the corrupt political establishment” is ready to initiate major changes.
Executive Orders and Border Security
The actions include 50 executive orders, including the declaration of a national border emergency that would effectively close the South American border. Trump plans to sign at least 25 executive orders on his first day, addressing issues such as domestic energy production, federal workforce reform, and citizenship policies.
“This is a massive, record-setting, unprecedented first wave,” an official told Fox News Digital.
A landmark order would end automatic U.S. citizenship for children born to undocumented immigrants, a move that is likely to face legal challenges as it conflicts with the 14th Amendment.
Mass deportations and manpower reforms
Trump’s first-day plans include launching mass deportations in Chicago and implementing federal workforce reforms. These policies would emphasize merit-based hiring, eliminate remote work, and warn federal employees that they would be fired if they failed to comply with the directives.
“There is a huge federal workforce that is advancing its own goals at the expense of the American people — and President Trump is taking the lead,” one official said.
Mass pardons and policy reversals
Trump is set to pardon all those arrested in connection with the Jan. 6 Capitol attack, which has led to the indictment of more than 1,625 people across the United States.
He also plans to withdraw from the Paris climate accord, halt offshore wind leases and reverse the electric vehicle mandate introduced by the Biden administration.
Symbolic and controversial movements.
In a more unorthodox move, Trump plans to rename the Gulf of Mexico the “Gulf of America.”
In a surprise pre-inauguration victory, TikTok briefly went offline on Sunday, citing compliance with a congressional ban. Trump announced plans to “secure” the app, signaling its return online.
Trump’s vision
On the campaign trail, Trump summed up his approach by saying, “I want to be a dictator for a day because I’m going to go with ‘drill, baby, drill.’ I’m never going to be a dictator after that.” .
Trump’s planned actions reflect his determination to deliver on campaign promises while sparking debate over legal and constitutional boundaries.