There are 50 to 100 expected executive orders. Many will focus on boosting fossil fuels and reversing climate policy.
There are 50 to 100 expected executive orders on Trump’s first day in office. Many will focus on boosting fossil fuels and reversing climate policy
Maryland Gov. Wes Moore said he’s reviewing a list of executive orders signed by President Donald Trump, and said he vows to “protect Marylanders.” Moore said his office is reviewing the action Trump took on day one,
Maryland's joint Republican Caucus ripped into Governor Wes Moore's budget. "After a week of evaluation, this deal seems to be getting worse and worse for Marylanders," said Senate Minority Leader Stephen Hershey,
The announcement came hours after Trump vowed to support tens of thousands of anti-abortion protesters at the March for Life.
[3] [4] In his 2014 book, By Order of the President: The Use and Abuse of Executive Direct Action, Phillip J. Cooper, a professor of public administration at Portland State University, wrote, "As a practical matter, the memorandum is now being used as the ...
We are banning church,” said Ronny Chieng, channeling the president’s apparent annoyance when a bishop asked him to be merciful.
President-elect Donald Trump has promised an avalanche of executive orders on his first day back in the White House.
The president-elect is planning to issue a memorandum Monday to study trade policies and evaluate U.S. trade relationships with China and America’s continental neighbors.
President Donald Trump and Vice President JD Vance were sworn into office today amid heightened security measures in Washington, D.C.
As President-elect Donald Trump is set to be inaugurated as the 47th president in just one day, one of his top policy advisers, Stephen Miller, met with Republican leadership in Congress on Sunday to discuss what executive orders Trump will sign once he takes office.
Trump's plans for the military include expunging "radical political theories" and "social experiments" imposed on service members, and he intends to reinstate, with back pay, anyone expelled for refusing the COVID vaccine.