Executive actions ready to go as Trump
prepares to take office
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[January 20, 2017]
By Ayesha Rascoe and Julia Edwards Ainsley
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Donald Trump is
preparing to sign executive actions on his first day in the White House
on Friday to take the opening steps to crack down on immigration, build
a wall on the U.S.-Mexican border and roll back outgoing President
Barack Obama's policies.
Trump, a Republican elected on Nov. 8 to succeed Democrat Obama, arrived
in Washington on a military plane with his family a day before he will
be sworn in during a ceremony at the U.S. Capitol.
Aides said Trump would not wait to wield one of the most powerful tools
of his office, the presidential pen, to sign several executive actions
that can be implemented without the input of Congress.
"He is committed to not just Day 1, but Day 2, Day 3 of enacting an
agenda of real change, and I think that you're going to see that in the
days and weeks to come," Trump spokesman Sean Spicer said on Thursday,
telling reporters to expect activity on Friday, during the weekend and
early next week.
Trump plans on Saturday to visit the headquarters of the CIA in Langley,
Virginia. He has harshly criticized the agency and its outgoing chief,
first questioning the CIA's conclusion that Russia was involved in cyber
hacking during the U.S. election campaign, before later accepting the
verdict. Trump also likened U.S. intelligence agencies to Nazi Germany.
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Trump's advisers vetted more than 200 potential executive orders for him
to consider signing on healthcare, climate policy, immigration, energy
and numerous other issues, but it was not clear how many orders he would
initially approve, according to a member of the Trump transition team
who was not authorized to talk to the press.
Signing off on orders puts Trump, who has presided over a sprawling
business empire but has never before held public office, in a familiar
place similar to the CEO role that made him famous, and will give him
some early victories before he has to turn to the lumbering process of
getting Congress to pass bills.
The strategy has been used by other presidents, including Obama, in
their first few weeks in office.
"He wants to show he will take action and not be stifled by Washington
gridlock," said Princeton University presidential historian Julian
Zelizer.
Trump is expected to impose a federal hiring freeze and take steps to
delay a Labor Department rule due to take effect in April that would
require brokers who give retirement advice to put their clients' best
interests first.
He also will give official notice he plans to withdraw from the
12-nation Trans-Pacific Partnership trade deal and renegotiate the North
American Free Trade Agreement with Canada and Mexico, Spicer said. "I
think you will see those happen very shortly," Spicer said.
Obama, ending eight years as president, made frequent use of his
executive powers during his second term in office, when the
Republican-controlled Congress stymied his efforts to overhaul
immigration and environmental laws. Many of those actions are now ripe
targets for Trump to reverse.
BORDER WALL
Trump is expected to sign an executive order in his first few days to
direct the building of a wall on the southern border with Mexico, and
actions to limit the entry of asylum seekers from Latin America, among
several immigration-related steps his advisers have recommended.
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That includes rescinding Obama's order that allowed more than 700,000
people brought into the United States illegally as children to stay in
the country on a two-year authorization to work and attend college,
according to several people close to the presidential transition team.
It is unlikely Trump's order will result in an immediate roundup of
these immigrants, sources told Reuters. Rather, he is expected to let
the authorizations expire.
The issue could set up a confrontation with Obama, who told reporters on
Wednesday he would weigh in if he felt the new administration was
unfairly targeting those immigrants.
Advisers to Trump expect him to put restrictions on people entering the
United States from certain countries until a system for "extreme
vetting" for Islamist extremists can be set up.
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Workers install the presidential seal at the site of the Commander
in Chief inaugural ball for President-elect Donald Trump in
Washington, D.C. January 19, 2016. REUTERS/Rick Wilking
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During his presidential campaign, Trump proposed banning non-American
Muslims from entering the United States, but his executive order
regarding immigration is expected to be based on nationality rather than
religion.
Another proposed executive order would require all Cabinet departments
to disclose and pause current work being done in connection with Obama's
initiatives to curb carbon emissions to combat climate change.
Trump also is expected to extend prohibitions on future lobbying imposed
on members of his transition team.
'THE HIGHEST IQ'
Washington was turned into a virtual fortress ahead of the inauguration,
with police ready to step in to separate protesters from Trump
supporters at any sign of unrest.
As Obama packed up to leave the White House, Trump and his family laid a
wreath at the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier in Arlington National Cemetery
and attended a concert at the Lincoln Memorial.
Trump spoke earlier to lawmakers and Cabinet nominees at a luncheon in a
ballroom at his hotel, down the street from the White House, announcing
during brief remarks that he would pick Woody Johnson, owner of the New
York Jets of the National Football League, as U.S. ambassador to
Britain.
"We have a lot of smart people. I tell you what, one thing we've
learned, we have by far the highest IQ of any Cabinet ever assembled,"
Trump said.
Trump has selected all 21 members of his Cabinet, along with six other
key positions requiring Senate confirmation. The Senate is expected on
Friday to vote to confirm retired General James Mattis, Trump's pick to
lead the Pentagon, and retired General John Kelly, his homeland security
choice.
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Senate Republicans had hoped to confirm as many as seven Cabinet members
on Friday, but Democrats balked at the pace. Trump spokesman Spicer
accused Senate Democrats of "stalling tactics."
Also in place for Monday will be 536 "beachhead team members" at
government agencies, Vice President-elect Mike Pence said, a small
portion of the thousands of positions Obama's appointees will vacate.
Trump has asked 50 Obama staffers in critical posts to stay on until
replacements can be found, including Deputy Defense Secretary Robert
Work and Brett McGurk, envoy to the U.S.-led coalition fighting Islamic
State.
The list includes Adam Szubin, who has long served in an "acting"
capacity in the Treasury Department's top anti-terrorism job because his
nomination has been held up by congressional Republicans since Obama
named him to the job in April 2015.
The Supreme Court said U.S. Chief Justice John Roberts, who will
administer the oath of office on Friday, met with Trump on Thursday to
discuss inauguration arrangements.
(Additional reporting by Steve Holland, David Shepardson, Susan Heavey,
David Alexander, Doina Chiacu, Ayesha Rascoe, Ginger Gibson, Mike Stone,
Emily Stephenson, David Brunnstrom and Lawrence Hurley; Writing by
Roberta Rampton; Editing by Will Dunham and Peter Cooney)
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