Trump's first day frenzy: Everything he promised to do on "day one"
https://www.axios.com/2024/12/26/trump-first-day-executive-orders?
Things Donald Trump has
said he will do on his first day in office
From 122 speeches,
press conferences and interviews Jan. 1, 2023, to Dec. 6, 2024
President-elect Trump is setting the stage for an explosive first day
in office: pardons for Jan. 6 rioters, a vacuum sealing of the southern border
and a massive regulatory rollback affecting vast swathes of the American
economy.
Why it
matters: The tone of the
next four years will be set on Day One. Trump and his transition — armed
with a cannon of executive orders — are preparing an early shock-and-awe
campaign to lay the foundation for his ambitious second term.
The big
picture: Trump's Day One
promises largely to fall under three themes, according to an Axios analysis of
hundreds of his speeches, press conferences and interviews.
1.
Immigration: No
issue has defined Trump's political identity more than his crusade against
illegal immigration, particularly after border crossings surged to record highs
under President Biden.
- A brain trust of West Wing border hawks — led by
Stephen Miller and former acting ICE director Tom Homan — will help
unleash a flurry of
executive orders ending
Biden's temporary "parole" programs, restarting construction of
the border wall and suspending refugee admissions.
- Trump is hellbent on immediately launching the
largest deportation operation in U.S. history, despite the logistical
challenges. Watch out for a Day One photo op flexing the new
administration's deportation muscle.
- The president-elect has also vowed to issue an
executive order ending
birthright citizenship, setting up a constitutional clash over the 14th Amendment that
could wind up at the Supreme Court.
2. Red meat for
MAGA: The second bucket
of executive orders will seek to institutionalize the conservative culture wars
that have dominated Republican politics over the last few years.
- Top priorities for Day One include a ban on diversity,
equity and inclusion (DEI) programs and requirements across the federal
government, and pardons
for supporters convicted
for breaking into the Capitol on Jan. 6.
- Trump, whose campaign spent millions of dollars
on anti-trans ads, also wants to use executive action to ban trans
women from
women's sports, though the exact mechanism for doing so is not yet clear.
3. Big
business: CEO and
investor confidence has
soared in the wake
of the election, as Corporate America revels in Trump's promise to slash 10
regulations for every new one introduced during the Biden administration.
- Trump has vowed to expedite permits for drilling
and fracking, even if it means acting like a "dictator" for one
day. Inauguration will also start the clock on his one-year
goal of
reducing energy prices by 50%.
- Trump plans to aggressively target Biden's
climate policies by cutting
off support for electric vehicles and rolling back emissions standards, as
well as any "job-killing" regulations affecting automakers.
- Wall Street, meanwhile, is working feverishly to
persuade Trump not to impose sweeping tariffs on U.S. trading partners —
but he seems intent on ushering in a new era of MAGA protectionism as
quickly as possible.
Between the
lines: Many of Trump's
sweeping promises will require the support of Congress. Others have proven to
be hyperbole, which Trump himself has acknowledged.
- "It's hard to bring [prices] down once
they're up. You know, it's very hard," the president-elect told NBC's
"Meet the Press," despite constantly pledging to crush
inflation on the campaign trail.
- Trump has also tamped down his talk of settling
the Russia-Ukraine war within 24 hours of taking office, telling
reporters last
week that peace may even be "more difficult" than ending the
Israel-Hamas war.
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