U.S. President Donald Trump on Monday (January 20, 2025) issued a flurry of executive orders and directives as he sought to put his stamp on his new administration on matters ranging from energy to criminal pardons and immigration.
Trump inauguration updates: January 20, 2025
Here are the executive orders signed so far on Monday:
Pardons
Trump pardoned about 1,500 people who stormed the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021, in a sweeping gesture of support to the people who assaulted police as they tried to prevent lawmakers from certifying his 2020 election defeat.
“We hope they come out tonight, frankly,” Trump said. “We’re expecting it.”
The far-reaching action also cuts short the sentences of 14 members of the far-right Proud Boys and Oath Keepers organizations, including some who were convicted of seditious conspiracy.
The document also directs the U.S. attorney general to drop pending cases related to the riot.
Immigration
Trump signed orders declaring illegal immigration at the U.S.-Mexico border a national emergency, designating criminal cartels as terrorist organizations, and targeting automatic citizenship for U.S.-born children of immigrants in the country illegally.
Trump’s order dealing with U.S. refugee resettlement will suspend the program for at least four months and will order a review of security to see if travelers from certain nations should be subject to a travel ban, the official said.
“The United States lacks the ability to absorb large numbers of migrants,” the order said.
Undoing Biden actions
At a rally at a sports arena, Trump revoked 78 executive actions of the previous administration.
“I’ll revoke nearly 80 destructive and radical executive actions of the previous administration,” Trump said.
Trump also said he will sign an order directing every agency to preserve all records pertaining to “political persecutions” under the Biden administration.
The rescission applied to executive orders spanning from former President Joe Biden’s first day in office in 2021 to as recently as last week, and covered topics from COVID relief to equal opportunity for Hispanics and Black Americans, and the promotion of clean energy industries.
Diversity
Trump also rescinded executive orders that had promoted diversity, equity and inclusion (DEI) and promoted rights for LGBTQ+ people and racial minorities, fulfilling promises to curtail protections for the most marginalized Americans.
Among the 78 repealed executive orders signed by Biden, including at least a dozen measures supporting racial equity and combating discrimination against gay and transgender people.
Regulatory, hiring freezes
Trump signed orders freezing government hiring and new federal regulations, as well as an order requiring federal workers to immediately return to full-time in-person work.
“I will implement an immediate regulation freeze, which will stop Biden bureaucrats from continuing to regulate,” Trump said, adding he will also “issue a temporary hiring freeze to ensure that we’re only hiring competent people who are faithful to the American public.”
The move would force large numbers of white-collar government employees to forfeit remote working arrangements, reversing a trend that took off in the early stages of the COVID-19 pandemic.
Some of Trump’s allies have said the return-to-work mandate is intended to help gut the civil service, making it easier for Trump to replace long-serving government workers with loyalists.
Inflation
Trump ordered the heads of all executive departments and agencies to deliver emergency price relief to the American people and increase the prosperity of the American worker. Measures include cutting regulations and climate policies that raise costs, and prescribe actions to lower the cost of housing and expand housing supply.
“Over the past 4 years, the Biden Administration’s destructive policies inflicted an historic inflation crisis on the American people,” the order said.
Climate
Trump also signed a withdrawal from the Paris climate treaty, including a letter to the United Nations explaining the withdrawal.
The announcement, which has been widely expected ever since Trump won the Nov. 5 presidential election, further threatens the central goal of the agreement to avoid a rise in global temperatures of 1.5 degrees Celsius, a target that appears even more tenuous as last year was the planet’s hottest on record.
“It is the policy of my Administration to put the interests of the United States and the American people first,” the order said.
He repealed a 2023 memo from Biden that barred oil drilling in some 16 million acres in the Arctic, saying government should encourage energy exploration and production on federal lands and waters, and eliminated an electric vehicle (EV) mandate.
Health
Another order withdrew the United States from the World Health Organization, saying the global health agency had mishandled the COVID-19 pandemic and other international health crises.
The plan, which aligns with Trump’s longstanding criticism of the U.N. health agency, marks a dramatic shift in U.S. global health policy and further isolates Washington from international efforts to battle pandemics.
Trump has nominated several critics of the organization to top public health positions, including Robert F. Kennedy Jr., a vaccine skeptic who is up for the post of secretary of Health and Human Services, which oversees all major U.S. health agencies including the CDC and FDA.
Government efficiency
Trump signed an executive action to create an advisory group called the Department of Government Efficiency aimed at carrying out dramatic cuts to the U.S. government, attracting immediate lawsuits challenging its operations. The group – dubbed “DOGE” – is being run by Tesla CEO Elon Musk and has grandiose goals of eliminating entire federal agencies and cutting three quarters of federal government jobs.
Targeting the ‘Deep State’
The president signed a document “ending weaponization” of government against political opponents. The order directs the attorney general to investigate the activities of the federal government over the last four years, including at the Department of Justice, the Securities and Exchange Commission, and the Federal Trade Commission during the prior administration.
It said the government will “identify and take appropriate action to correct past misconduct by the Federal Government related to the weaponization of law enforcement and the weaponization of the Intelligence Community.”
Free speech
Trump signed an executive order that he said was aimed at “restoring freedom of speech and ending federal censorship.”
“Under the guise of combating ‘misinformation,’ ‘disinformation,’ and ‘malinformation,’ the Federal Government infringed on the constitutionally protected speech rights of American citizens,” the White House said.
Trump and his Republican allies had accused the administration of Democratic former President Biden of encouraging suppression of free speech on online platforms.
Energy
Trump declared a national energy emergency, promising to fill up strategic oil reserves and export U.S. energy all over the world.
He laid out a sweeping plan to maximize U.S. oil and gas production – including by declaring a national energy emergency, stripping away excess regulation, and withdrawing the U.S. from an international pact to fight climate change.
Trump said he expects the orders to help reduce consumer prices and improve U.S. national security. He also signed orders aimed at promoting oil and gas development in Alaska, reversing Biden’s efforts to protect vast Arctic lands and waters from drilling.
The U.S. also will withdraw from the Paris climate agreement and end leasing to wind farms, according to the White House’s website. In addition, Trump said he would revoke what he has called an electric vehicle mandate.
The moves signal a dramatic U-turn in Washington’s energy policy after Biden sought to encourage a transition away from fossil fuels and establish the U.S. as a leader in combating global warming
Tarrifs
While Trump mentioned no specific tariff plans in his inaugural address, he and members of his cabinet said they were coming, to be collected by a new agency called the External Revenue Service.
His first day reprieve signals a possibly more deliberative approach to imposing tariffs, an issue that has shaken global policymakers and investors, and prompted a relief rally in global stocks and key foreign currencies against the dollar.
In a broad presidential trade memo draft seen by Reuters, Trump also directed federal agencies to assess China’s performance under the “Phase 1” trade deal he signed with Beijing in 2020 to end a nearly two-year tariff war.
The deal required China to increase purchases of U.S. exports by $200 billion over two years, but Beijing failed to meet the targets as the COVID-19 pandemic hit.
OECD tax deal
President Donald Trump on Monday signed an executive action declaring that the global minimum corporate tax deal supported by the Biden administration and negotiated with more than 100 other countries has “no force or effect” within the U.S. barring an act of Congress adopting the deal.
“This memorandum recaptures our Nation’s sovereignty and economic competitiveness by clarifying that the Global Tax Deal has no force or effect in the United States,” the memorandum said. The document was among a rush of orders and actions taken by Trump on his first day in office.
U.S. foreign aid
U.S. President Donald Trump on Monday ordered a 90-day pause in foreign development assistance pending assessments of efficiencies and consistency with U.S. foreign policy.
“All department and agency heads with responsibility for United States foreign development assistance programs shall immediately pause new obligations and disbursements of development assistance funds,” read the executive order signed by Trump.
Published – January 21, 2025 07:06 am IST