President TrumpHe immediately exercised his presidential powers after taking office, fulfilling some of the major promises he made during the campaign.
“Today I will sign a series of historic executive orders. With these actions, we will begin the radical restoration of America and the revolution of common sense,” the 47th President of the United States vowed throughout his presidency. inaugural address Monday at the U.S. Capitol.
Hours later, Trump made good on his promise, signing a raft of executive orders in front of thousands of supporters at the First Capitol Arena in Washington — a first in U.S. history — and later at the White House. The executive order was signed in a traditional Oval Office setting.
“This is pure Trump. He’s the first president in a new connected world where you have to govern from the outside in. You have to build support and get people with you,” senior Republican strategist Alex Castellanos told Fox News Digital.
Head here to watch the latest Fox News coverage of President Trump’s first day in office
Trump’s Immigration Commitment was central to his successful presidential bid to win back the White House.
“From day one, I will launch the largest criminal deportation program in American history,” the then-Republican presidential candidate vowed at a rally at New York City’s Madison Square Garden in late October.
Trump took immediate action within his first hours back in office.
Fox Premiere: Trump vows to take more than 200 executive actions on day one
The new president declared a national emergency on Mexico’s southern border and ordered the deployment of U.S. troops to help support migrants. Trump also ordered the resumption of a first-administration policy that forced asylum seekers to wait at the Mexican border. But it’s unclear whether Mexico will accept migrants again.
Trump also directed the federal government to resume border wall construction, which began during his first term but was halted by President Biden.
Trump signs an order ending birthright citizenship for children of illegal immigrants. But because the U.S. Constitution enshrines birthright citizenship, Trump’s executive order is certain to face immediate legal challenges in court from civil rights groups and immigration activists.
“I will declare a national emergency on our southern border. All illegal entry will stop immediately. We will begin sending millions of criminal aliens back to where they came from. We will restore my residency in Mexico. I will Ending the practice of catch and release, I will send troops to the southern border to repel a catastrophic invasion of our country,” Trump emphasized in his inaugural address.
Trump vows to act at ‘historic speed’ as inauguration brings redemption
The President also announced, “We will also designate cartels as foreign terrorist organizations. By invoking the Foreign Enemy Act of 1798, I will direct our government to use the full and tremendous power of federal and state law enforcement to eliminate these cartels.” .”The presence of all foreign gangs and criminal networks. “
During his two-year campaign to return to the White House, Trump repeatedly vowed to “drill, baby, drill” and pledged to end the Biden administration’s electric vehicle mandate.
On Monday, Trump followed up on the matter by adding his own Energy Executive Order for his efforts to control inflation.
Trump said: “I will direct all members of my Cabinet to use their tremendous powers to defeat record inflation and quickly reduce costs and prices. The inflation crisis is caused by massive overspending and rising energy prices. ”
“That’s why today I’m also declaring a national energy emergency. We’re going to drill, baby, drill,” he said. “America is going to be a manufacturing nation again, and we have something that no other manufacturing nation will ever have. The biggest amount of oil and gas of any country on earth.”
Trump and Republicans have repeatedly attacked Democrats up and down the ballot over the Biden administration’s protections for transgender students in the 2024 cycle
“We’re going to end it on day one,” Trump vowed last May. “Don’t forget, this is done by order of the president. It’s an executive order. We’re going to change it — it will change from day one.”
Trump followed suit with executive actions that the president’s advisers said would “protect women from gender, ideology, extremism and restore biological truth to the federal government.”
“As of today, it is the official policy of the United States government that there are only two genders: male and female,” the president said.
The president also signed an order ending the diversity, equity and inclusion program — best known by the acronym DEI — within the federal government. The orders direct the White House to identify and terminate programs within the government.
Another promise on the campaign trail was to pardon defendants and commute the sentences of many people convicted in connection with the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the U.S. Capitol by Trump supporters who sought to block Congress from President Joe Biden’s 2020 election victory The authentication was unsuccessful.
Trump made no mention of pardons in his inaugural address, but minutes later, as he addressed supporters gathered in an overflow room at the U.S. Capitol, he reiterated his long-standing, unsubstantiated claim that the 2020 president The election was “totally rigged.”
Hours later, before cheering supporters who packed into a downtown Washington arena, Trump declared that he would immediately “sign pardons for a lot of people… to get them out.”
He’s not kidding.
Back in the White House, the president ultimately pardoned about 1,500 people, including some convicted of assaulting police officers, scuttling the Justice Department’s efforts to punish those who stormed the Capitol on one of America’s darkest days.
“These people have been devastated,” Trump said as he signed the pardon. “It’s an outrage what they did to these people.”
Trump also took action on things that were not mentioned on the campaign trail.
In his inaugural address, Trump declared: “Soon, we will be renaming the Gulf of Mexico the Gulf of America.”
Pointing to Mount Denali in Alaska, North America’s highest peak, the president said, “We will restore the name of our great President William McKinley to Mount McKinley, where it belongs, where it belongs.”
“He’s pouring into the area. He’s making the case for action. He’s demonstrating action. He’s rallying the American people to protest against the government,” Castellanos, a veteran of multiple Republican presidential campaigns, told Fox News. “I think it’s overwhelming, and Democrats don’t know what’s hitting them.”
“Can you imagine Biden doing this? I don’t think so,” the president said as he signed the executive order in front of thousands of supporters.
But Trump has not delivered on all of his campaign promises.
Trump envoy sets longer timetable to end Russia-Ukraine war
One of the most important vows he failed to keep on his first day in office was to immediately end a deadly war in Eastern Europe.
Trump repeatedly claimed on the campaign trail that he would “one day” end the nearly three-year war between Russia and Ukraine.
“The Russians and the Ukrainians, they’re dying. I want them to stop dying. I’m going to get it done — and I’m going to get it done in 24 hours,” Trump vowed at a May 2023 town hall.
In September, during a lone debate with Vice President Kamala Harris, Trump vowed “I’m going to fix this before I become president.”
Obviously, that didn’t happen.
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Earlier this month, Trump’s Ukraine envoy, retired general Keith Kellogg, proposed a longer timeline.
“I want to set a goal on a personal level, on a professional level, and I would say, let’s set it to 100 days,” he told Fox News Channel.