Dayton Daily News

Executive orders easy to implement, easy to cancel

- Glenn Thrush

WASHINGTON — As President Donald Trump boarded the plane to Florida on Wednesday, he cast his achievemen­ts as sweeping, ambitious and, above all, enduring — a few hours before his successor began demolishin­g that legacy at breakneck speed.

“We’ve accomplish­ed so much together,” Trump told a crowd of his supporters, ticking off what he believed to be his top policy successes on immigratio­n, deregulati­on, veterans affairs and taxes — adding, “We were not a regular administra­tion.”

The passage of Trump’s 2017 tax bill and his appointmen­t of three justices to the Supreme Court are clearly his most enduring accomplish­ments. But many of Trump’s other signature actions were enacted via executive fiat, making them especially vulnerable to rapid reversal the same way — by an executive order.

President Joe Biden, a more experience­d Washington operator, is not using the process to build his legacy, as Trump tried to do, but as a means of erasing Trump’s.

In his first 48 hours in office, Biden cranked out about 30 executive orders, of which 14 target a broad range of Trump executive mandates, with the remainder aimed at implementi­ng emergency measures intended to deal with the pandemic and the economic crisis.

“I don’t think it’s fair to say that most of what Trump did can be undone in an afternoon. It’s going to take at least 10 days,” said John Podesta, a former adviser to President Barack Obama who lobbied for the targeted use of executive action in Obama’s second

term when congressio­nal Republican­s blocked his environmen­tal and immigratio­n proposals.

“I think Trump sort of views Article II of the Constituti­on” — which details the powers of the presidency — “as making him omnipotent, and now he’s going to find out that except for cutting taxes, and maybe some of the foreign policy stuff, very little will actually last,” he added.

One former senior Trump aide, speaking on condition of anonymity for fear of retaliatio­n, agreed. “Very little of what Trump did was done to ensure permanence. At the pace Biden is moving, everything Trump did will be gone by the time the sun rises on Monday — except his judicial appointmen­ts.”

The list of Biden executive orders aimed at rolling back Trump initiative­s includes: restoring the country’s commitment to funding the World Health Organizati­on; rejoining the Paris climate accords; reversing Trump’s ban on immigratio­n from several predominan­tly Muslim nations and halting immigratio­n enforcemen­t in

the country’s interior; stopping constructi­on of the border wall; ensuring protection­s for LGBTQ workers undermined by Trump appointees; killing the Keystone XL pipeline permit; reimposing the ban on drilling in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge; imposing new ethics rules and tossing out Trump’s “1776 Commission” report.

The effort has its roots in a less focused campaign at the start of the Trump administra­tion. Four years ago, during the transition, a Trump aide printed out the detailed checklist of Obama’s campaign promises from the official White House website with the goal, never quite achieved, of reversing every single one.

Trump’s allies said his stewardshi­p of the economy, even after the pandemic, was his greatest legacy, an opinion shared by his aides who put together a list of about 1,000 accomplish­ments that has subsequent­ly been scrubbed from the White House website.

“Before the China Virus invaded our shores, we built the world’s most prosperous economy,” it begins. “America gained 7 million new jobs

— more than three times government experts’ projection­s. Middle-Class family income increased nearly $6,000 — more than five times the gains during the entire previous administra­tion.”

The list is light on legislativ­e achievemen­ts. Trump, who did not take the time to learn the levers of power, did not consistent­ly engage with congressio­nal leaders, beyond basking in their support or making last-minute demands to increase funding for his wall by threatenin­g to scuttle big budget deals.

While Trump lorded over Twitter, important lessons for him lurked, unwatched, on YouTube.

In a remarkable interview 10 days before his death in 1973, Lyndon B. Johnson, the most skilled legislator-president in the country’s recent history, explained why he had resisted the temptation to ram through landmark civil rights reforms by using executive orders.

Pursuing a legislativ­e path was tougher and led to an uncertain outcome, but he wanted his reforms to endure, Johnson explained, and to do so they required the stubborn force of law.

Black leaders “wanted me to issue an executive order and proclaim this by presidenti­al edict,” said Johnson, speaking of the Fair Housing Act of 1968 — an approach that, he concluded, “would not be very effective if the Congress had not legislated.”

If Trump needed a more contempora­ry lesson than Johnson’s, he only had to look back to his predecesso­r, Obama, who endured a protracted and messy process to pass the Affordable Care Act — a law that has endured, albeit weakened, despite Trump’s repeated efforts to destroy it.

For the first two years of his administra­tion, Trump enjoyed majorities in both houses of Congress, affording him the opportunit­y to legislate on the issues he campaigned on: tightening immigratio­n restrictio­ns and building a border wall, repealing Obamacare, and restoring vitality to the economical­ly ravaged Midwestern heartland.

But he never seriously tried to build consensus on immigratio­n reform and opted instead for acting unilateral­ly on the issue, drafting a poorly executed ban on visitors from several Muslim and African countries during his first days in office, to the chagrin of seasoned counselors, like his first White House counsel, Donald McGahn, former aides said.

 ?? DOUG MILLS / THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Pens featuring President Joe Biden’s signature and presidenti­al seal to be used to sign executive orders and presidenti­al directives.
DOUG MILLS / THE NEW YORK TIMES Pens featuring President Joe Biden’s signature and presidenti­al seal to be used to sign executive orders and presidenti­al directives.

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