The Phnom Penh Post

Trump to improvise executive orders as president

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their presidenci­es and send a message about their agendas.

It was clear that Trump had devised no such strategy by his first day in office, as advisers expressed doubt until the last moments about whether he would issue any directives Friday. “It’s going to be a gameday decision,” Sean Spicer, theWhite House press secretary, told reporters that afternoon.

Then, at about 7pm, reporters were summoned to the Oval Office. After sprinting from the briefing room, they watched Trump sign a directive to federal agencies to begin scaling back parts of the Affordable Care Act.

“There are a number that are being looked at, but it’s just a question of which ones he feels like doing, and when,” Spicer had said of executive orders earlier Friday. In recent days, he had said Trump’s top aides were still deciding on the “sequencing” of the unilateral actions.

Still, there is little doubt about the policy areas inTrump’s sights: internatio­nal trade deals, illegal immigratio­n, the fight against the Islamic State, climate change and Washington lobbying.

In his first half-day in office, Trump focused on health care, ordering the machinery of government to look for every opportunit­y to pull back on Barack Obama’s signature achievemen­t by waiving fees or granting exemptions to states, businesses, individual­s and insurance companies. He also moved to freeze the Obama administra­tion’s unfinished regulation­s, a routine step for an incoming president of the opposite party.

During the campaign, Trump railed against Obama’s use of executive authority to sidestep an uncooperat­ive Congress on issues such as immigratio­n and health care. After his victory, Trump vowed to use those same powers to quickly reverse the country’s ideologica­l course.

Aides said they hoped to group Trump’s executive actions thematical­ly for maximum impact. They gave few other details, though some advisers suggested that executive actions on illegal immigratio­n could be among the first issued after the inaugural weekend.

If he moves aggressive­ly, he could immediatel­y overturn Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals, or DACA – the program Obama created to protect young immigrants who were brought illegally to the United States as children, giving them legal status and access to work permits. Ending that program would put as many as 800,000 of them at risk of being removed from their families and sent to the countries they had left as children.

TheWhite House could instead unwind the program slowly, giving the young people, often called Dreamers, more time before their immigratio­n protection­s and work permits expire. Senator Dick Durbin, D-Illinois, said Friday that in a brief conversati­on with the new president, Trump had given him assurances about the program.

The president, Durbin said, told him that “we don’t want to hurt those kids; we’re going to do something”.

“Thank goodness he said that,” the senator added.

The president could also order federal agents to conduct workplace raids to crack down on immigratio­n violations. He could take action against sanctuary cities, those that shield undocument­ed immigrants from deportatio­n. Or he could issue an order reinstatin­g Secure Communitie­s, in which local authoritie­s cooperated with federal agencies to detect and deport undocument­ed migrants.

And he could order work to begin, at least symbolical­ly, on a wall at the southern border. Financing constructi­on of the entire wall would require congressio­nal action, however. But on the border wall and other promises, Trump now faces the challenge of translatin­g slogans into action. He has already missed the deadline for a vow he made in August to start deporting undocument­ed migrants with criminal records on his first day in office.

“We will begin moving them out, Day 1,” he said during a rally in Phoenix. “My first hour in office, those people are gone.”

Trump’s approach to using his newly minted executive power mirrors his often chaotic transition to the White House.

The stop-and-start nature of the new president’s first 24 hours reflected his management style, both in his business empire and in the campaign, which went through four shake-ups as aides fell into and out of favour. His travel schedule was rarely planned out more than a few days in advance, and Trump did not hesitate to tear it apart when he wanted to. Decisions would be telegraphe­d by top advisers, only to be pulled back within hours, or never formally announced.

The lack of planning stands in stark contrast to the approaches of past presidents, who have sought to demonstrat­e the change in direction they hope to lead and maximise the effectiven­ess of their unilateral actions.

Obama, for example, decided well in advance which executive actions he wanted to take in his first days.

Obama’s embrace of executive orders – early in the administra­tion and later, when a Republican-controlled Congress blocked his legislativ­e agenda – may have helped pave the way for Trump to take quick action. Since many of Obama’s achievemen­ts were put in place with executive action, Trump can reverse them, at least over time, the same way.

 ?? MANDEL NGAN/AFP ?? US President Donald Trump acknowledg­es the crowd during his swearingin ceremony on Friday in Washington.
MANDEL NGAN/AFP US President Donald Trump acknowledg­es the crowd during his swearingin ceremony on Friday in Washington.
 ?? VIGILI DEL FUOCO/AFP ?? Firefighte­rs extinguish flames in the wreckage of the bus after it crashed in Italy on Saturday.
VIGILI DEL FUOCO/AFP Firefighte­rs extinguish flames in the wreckage of the bus after it crashed in Italy on Saturday.

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