Physical Address
304 North Cardinal St.
Dorchester Center, MA 02124
Physical Address
304 North Cardinal St.
Dorchester Center, MA 02124

President-elect Donald J. Trump on Monday will begin issuing a series of executive orders including major steps to crack down on immigration and dismantle various federal government operations, the his press team, began his presidency using muscle power. to mark changes to existing policies.
Mr. Trump would also act unilaterally to end the Biden administration’s electric car regulations, roll back protections for transgender students and suspend asylum applications for at least four months, they said. .
The flurry of executive actions is an effort to roll back many of President Biden’s most important national policies, particularly on climate and immigration, and to re-establish his agenda. it is Trump who will start drilling and extracting natural resources and boosting the US economy. a sacred role for refugees and migrants.
Mr. Trump has promised to explode as soon as he takes office this afternoon. At a dinner with donors on Sunday night, Mr. Trump said that “within the hours that I take office, I will sign dozens of executive orders — close to 100, in fact.” It is not clear whether Mr. Trump will sign all the directives on Monday afternoon, or if there will be more expected in the coming days.
Some of the orders he will sign will be used in court and others will be generally symbolic. But combined, they would be a sharp turn after the Biden administration, an effort to begin fulfilling his campaign promises and the first step in cracking down on what he and his aides see as a “deep state” effort. ” to stop his. schedule.
Senior advisers explained many of them to the press. Here are some of the main elements.
Close the border to immigrants seeking asylum and end asylum and birthright citizenship. The president cannot change the constitution on his own, so it is not yet clear whether Trump plans to end the guarantee of citizenship for those born in the United States, which is in the 14th amendment.
Recruit the US military to secure the border. This could cause an immediate legal challenge because of the strict limits in US law on how armed forces can be inside the country.
Declare migrant crossings along the US-Mexico border a national emergency, which would allow Mr Trump to unilaterally unlock federal funding for a border wall, without approval Congress, for tougher enforcement efforts.
Designate drug cartels as “global terrorists”.
Establish biological sex definitions for federal employees and as part of updated Title IX guidance for schools
Remove protections for transgender people in federal prisons.
Remove protections for transgender immigrants in US prisons.
Direct federal agencies to initiate investigations into trade practices, including trade losses, unfair practices in currency, counterfeit goods and special exemptions that allow low-cost goods to enter for free. -free in the US.
Evaluate China’s approval of the trade agreement signed by Mr. Trump in 2020, as well as the US-Mexico-Canada Agreement, which Trump signed in 2020 to replace the North American Free Trade Agreement.
Order the government to evaluate the feasibility of creating an “External Revenue Service” to collect fees and duties.
Declares a national energy emergency, allowing it to open up the power grid to speed up licensing of pipelines and power plants.
Orders the federal government to roll back regulations that hinder domestic energy production.
Expresses intent to loosen emissions limits and fuel economy standards.
Review energy efficiency standards for dishwashers, shower heads and gas stoves.
Open up the Alaskan wilderness by drilling for more oil and gas.
Eliminate government-wide environmental justice programs aimed at protecting poor communities from excessive pollution.
Mr Trump vowed on Sunday morning to issue an executive order to give ByteDance, the Chinese owner of TikTok, more time to make sales and comply with laws banning it in the US. White House officials who came to view Mr. Trump’s executive action on Monday did not discuss the executive action in practice.
Erica L. Green, Ana Swanson Hamed Aleaziz, Lisa Friedman SY Brad Plumer contributed to the report.