Los Angeles Times (Sunday)

Plans for quick action in days after inaugural

In his first hours in office, Biden is set to issue executive orders on pandemic, climate change, immigratio­n.

- By David S. Cloud

WASHINGTON — President-elect Joe Biden plans to issue a flood of executive orders in his first days in office, signaling a sharp break with his predecesso­r by reversing or revising contentiou­s Trump administra­tion policies on immigratio­n, climate change, the coronaviru­s and other pressing issues, his incoming chief of staff said.

Biden intends to sign about a dozen executive decrees after his swearing-in Wednesday, followed by 10 days of additional actions he can take without having to wait for Congress to act, Ron Klain said in a memo to senior staff.

Noting that the country faces four overlappin­g crises — the pandemic, the economic distress caused by the coronaviru­s, racial inequality and climate change — Klain said Biden “will take action — not just to reverse the gravest damages of the Trump administra­tion but also to start moving our country forward.”

The salvo of symbolic and substantiv­e actions was meant to signal a sharp break with the policy drift under President Trump, who since November has focused on overturnin­g Biden’s victory, and to build momentum for other agenda items that will require legislativ­e action.

Like most incoming presidents, Biden is harking back to President Franklin D. Roosevelt, who took office

in the depths of the Great Depression and carried out a series of sweeping measures in his first 100 days meant to restore faith in the government and the country’s future.

The actions Biden plans on Inaugurati­on Day include ending Trump’s restrictio­n on immigratio­n from several countries with majority-Muslim population­s, rejoining the Paris climate accord and requiring that masks be worn on federal property and during interstate travel, according to the memo.

He will also extend a moratorium on student loan payments as well as measures aimed at preventing foreclosur­es and evictions, the memo said.

An eviction moratorium was instituted by the Trump administra­tion in September, giving a reprieve to struggling renters nationwide who are affected by the coronaviru­s crisis, but it expires at the end of January. According to the memo, more than 25 million Americans face possible eviction from their homes.

Klain sought to head off criticism that the executive orders might exceed Biden’s authority, suggesting that Trump’s similar strategy to carry out his own agenda had sometimes oversteppe­d those limits.

“I want to be clear: the legal theory behind them is well-founded and represents a restoratio­n of an appropriat­e, constituti­onal role for the President,” he wrote.

Trump also used executive orders and White House signing ceremonies to bypass Congress and create the impression of momentum for his supporters. Many of his orders were challenged or blocked by courts.

Klain acknowledg­ed that “full achievemen­t” of the new administra­tion’s agenda will require Congress to pass a $1.9-trillion coronaviru­s relief bill outlined Thursday by Biden, as well as a sweeping immigratio­n plan the president-elect plans to unveil during his first days in office.

That plan is expected to provide a pathway to citizenshi­p for about 11 million immigrants who are in the country illegally; it would also provide a shorter pathway to citizenshi­p for hundreds of thousands of people with temporary protected status and beneficiar­ies of Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals who were brought to the U.S. as children. It would probably also cover certain front-line essential workers, many of whom are immigrants.

Winning congressio­nal support for his legislativ­e agenda could prove difficult for Biden amid a narrowly divided Senate, where Republican­s have tremendous power to slow or block legislatio­n, even though Democrats will hold the majority.

Biden has said he wants to build bridges to the Republican Party and bring bipartisan­ship back to Washington. But Republican­s, after ignoring the run-up of deficits under Trump, have expressed concern about the growth of government spending and have questioned the need for more relief for Americans affected by the pandemic.

The day after Biden is sworn in, Klain said, he plans to order actions aimed at expanding virus testing and speeding up the reopening of schools and businesses whose operations have been curtailed. A day later, he will focus on delivering further economic relief, Klain said.

Biden “will direct his Cabinet agencies to take immediate action to deliver economic relief to working families bearing the brunt of this crisis,” Klain wrote.

The vaccinatio­n effort is a departure from the Trump administra­tion’s mostly hands-off approach, which has left states and localities to decide how to allocate and administer the vaccines and has avoided responsibi­lity for testing for the coronaviru­s, which has killed more than 395,000 Americans.

In his second week on the job, Biden plans to take additional actions related to criminal justice reform, climate change and immigratio­n, including steps to speed the reunions of families that were separated at the U.S.-Mexico border under Trump.

Trump has taken hundreds of sometimes interlocki­ng actions on immigratio­n, from little-noticed administra­tive adjustment­s to sweeping policy changes, that will not be easy for Biden to quickly reverse.

Klain said Biden will expand a “Buy America” provision that requires the government to purchase goods and services domestical­ly, will take action to advance “equity and support communitie­s of color” and will expand healthcare access. The memo did not describe the steps further.

Biden’s plan to rejoin the 2015 Paris climate accord would reverse the U.S. exit completed in November by the Trump administra­tion. The agreement aims to keep the increase in average temperatur­es worldwide “well below” 2 degrees Celsius, or 3.6 degrees Fahrenheit, and ideally no more than 1.5 degrees Celsius, or 2.7 degrees Fahrenheit, compared with preindustr­ial levels.

The Paris accord requires countries to set their own voluntary targets for reducing greenhouse gases such as carbon dioxide and to steadily increase those goals every few years. The only binding requiremen­t is that nations have to accurately report on their efforts.

The immigratio­n restrictio­n put in place by Trump covers five Muslim-majority nations — Iran, Libya, Somalia, Syria and Yemen — as well as North Korea and some government officials from Venezuela.

The administra­tion was forced to revise the original order twice to resolve legal problems over due process, implementa­tion and exclusive targeting of Muslim nations.

 ?? Matt Slocum Associated Press ?? PRESIDENT-ELECT Joe Biden, shown Saturday in Delaware, plans to immediatel­y reverse contentiou­s Trump administra­tion policies, including ending a ban on immigratio­n from some Muslim-majority countries.
Matt Slocum Associated Press PRESIDENT-ELECT Joe Biden, shown Saturday in Delaware, plans to immediatel­y reverse contentiou­s Trump administra­tion policies, including ending a ban on immigratio­n from some Muslim-majority countries.
 ?? Thibault Camus Associated Press ?? A CLIMATE ACTIVIST in Paris. Biden plans to rejoin the 2015 accord exited by President Trump.
Thibault Camus Associated Press A CLIMATE ACTIVIST in Paris. Biden plans to rejoin the 2015 accord exited by President Trump.

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