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With 28 Executive Orders Signed, President Biden Is Off To A Record Start

President Joe Biden puts the cap on a pen after signing an executive order in the State Dinning Room of the White House.
Alex Brandon
/
AP
President Joe Biden puts the cap on a pen after signing an executive order in the State Dinning Room of the White House.

In his first two weeks in office, President Biden has signed nearly as many executive orders as Franklin Roosevelt signed in his entire first month. And President Roosevelt holds the record.

Adding his signature to three executive orders on immigration Tuesday, Biden has now signed 28 executive orders since taking office. FDR signed 30 in his first month.

"By sheer volume, Biden is going to be the most active president on this front since the 1930s," said Andy Rudalevige, a professor of government at Bowdoin College.

Executive orders are the easiest presidential directives to track over time because they are all numbered and published in the Federal Register. But Biden is using many more levers of executive authority, also signing presidential memoranda, proclamations and letters.

Here's how Biden stacks up with other recent presidents on executive orders:

Biden's actions so far include:

  • 28 executive orders
  • four substantive proclamations (plus one ceremonial)
  • 10 presidential memoranda
  • and two letters (rejoining the World Health Organization and Paris climate agreement)
  • And while the numbers are large, these actions aren't barrier-breaking. They call for the creation of task forces, direct agencies to begin a regulatory process or explore a policy change.

    "A lot of what these orders consist of are plans to make plans, in a sense," Rudalevige said. "There's a lot of reviewing, reporting, sort of an urging to rev up that process, but it's not a substitute for the process itself."

    Executive actions can't create new laws — they have to exist within the constraints of the Constitution and existing statute. They direct the executive branch to do what is already in its power. And as a result they can be, and often are, reversed by the next president. In fact, many of Biden's actions take aim at things former President Donald Trump had done with a swipe of his Sharpie.

    "There's a lot of talk with good reason about the number of executive orders that I've signed," Biden said while signing the immigration executive orders. "I'm not making new law. I'm eliminating bad policy."

    Some Republicans have criticized Biden for pushing through Democratic priorities with a signature, after preaching unity and bipartisanship. The number of actions is notable, but these sorts of reversals are something most presidents do.

    "The motto of the Reagan transition team was 'when in doubt, undo.' That was the motto," said Phillip Cooper, a professor of government at Portland State University. Biden's team, he said, "didn't want to just undo, they wanted to put back in place what had been there before or pick up what had been there before and build on it."

    Trump made reversing Obama administration policies a mission of his presidency. Now Biden is reversing the reversals — for instance, the letter he signed returning the U.S. to the Paris climate agreement, which Trump had just pulled the U.S. out of in November.

    President Nixon signed an executive order on Jan. 23, 1969 creating his new Urban Affairs Council.
    Harvey Georges / AP
    /
    AP
    President Nixon signed an executive order on Jan. 23, 1969, creating his new Urban Affairs Council.

    Several other Biden executive actions relate to the coronavirus pandemic. This fits with another trend in presidential directives: There are a lot of them in times of crisis or war.

    Combine a public health crisis with the first year of a presidency and "the fact that he is coming after a president that he opposes. All of that is the perfect storm to get a flurry of executive orders that we've seen," said Sharece Thrower, an associate professor of political science at Vanderbilt University.

    Cooper says more than any administration in modern history, Biden's team came in prepared, with the legal groundwork already carefully laid. This is a contrast with the early days of both the Clinton and Trump presidencies, where there were drafting problems and legal overreach that opened them up to challenges and forced revisions. The Biden orders may not be as far-reaching as advocates would like, but they may be more durable.

    "If you look at the orders, the language of the orders and what they're actually calling for by the agencies seem to be very measured," Cooper said. "Although they are in very controversial topics in some cases, you're not seeing anything in there that's substantively all that dramatic."

    This gets at another purpose of executive orders: They can be the equivalent of very formally written press releases. They allow a president to signal that they are doing something — that they are delivering on the promises they made when they ran for office, even if the executive action is really just the first step in a long process of change.

    Copyright 2021 NPR. To see more, visit https://www.npr.org.

    Biden signs executive actions in the Oval Office of the White House on January 28.
    Pool / Getty Images
    /
    Getty Images
    Biden signs executive actions in the Oval Office of the White House on Jan. 28.

    Tamara Keith has been a White House correspondent for NPR since 2014 and co-hosts the NPR Politics Podcast, the top political news podcast in America. Keith has chronicled the Trump administration from day one, putting this unorthodox presidency in context for NPR listeners, from early morning tweets to executive orders and investigations. She covered the final two years of the Obama presidency, and during the 2016 presidential campaign she was assigned to cover Hillary Clinton. In 2018, Keith was elected to serve on the board of the White House Correspondents' Association.
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