During campaigns that last as long as 18 months, presidential candidates frequently promise action on various issues "on day one." When he's inaugurated for his second term on Jan. 20, President-elect Donald Trump will have to sort through his robust file of campaign trail pledges and decide which merit immediate action and which can wait.
What did the commentators say? Trump made 41 promises during his campaign for day-one action, said The Washington Post. This includes declaring a national emergency to begin mass deportations, revoking job security from roughly 50,000 federal employees, and rolling back protections for transgender students in schools. He also pledged to withdraw from the Paris Climate Accords, reimpose a travel ban, revoke birthright citizenship, rescind Biden administration policies on energy and drilling, and pardon Jan. 6 insurrection participants. "Your head will spin when you see what's going to happen," Trump said last month.
"Some 'day one' commitments are simply not possible," said Bryan Metzger and Brent D. Griffiths at Business Insider, especially his plans to tackle inflation and his pledge to eliminate taxes on tips and overtime work. But much of his "signature promises can be set into motion via executive orders." Trump could "make use of the discretionary powers available to the executive branch for dictatorial purposes," said Federico Finchelstein and Emmanuel Guerisoli at The New Republic, including instructing the Department of Justice to begin targeting the president's enemies. However, "even a strongman may discover that there are limits to what he can do," said Doyle McManus at the Los Angeles Times.
What next? Opponents of these plans will undoubtedly file a flurry of lawsuits against Trump's day-one executive orders, as was the case in 2017. Many of Mr. Trump's orders were "quickly challenged in court, held up for months or even years by judges who deemed them unlawful efforts to get around the will of Congress," said Theodore Schleifer at The New York Times.
During his first term, Trump faced 160 multistate legal filings, 94 of which were successful. Leaders like California Gov. Gavin Newsom (D) and Illinois Gov. J.B. Pritzker (D) are already making extensive preparations to fight Trump's agenda in their heavily Democratic states. Newsom called a special session of the state legislature to "Trump-proof" the state of California. |