An Overview of Trump’s Dozens of Executive Actions

An Overview of Trump’s Dozens of Executive Actions
Illustration by The Epoch Times, Getty Images

President Donald Trump set a breakneck pace on the first day of his second term, taking numerous executive actions and rescinding 78 executive orders from his predecessor, while also pardoning roughly 1,500 people charged in connection with the Jan. 6, 2021, breach at the U.S. Capitol.

Trump’s executive orders set the stage for deportation operations while cracking down on illegal immigration and crime.

The president reinstated the “remain in Mexico” policy (formally known as the Migrant Protection Protocols), ended the “catch and release” of illegal immigrants, sought to designate cartels as foreign terrorist organizations, paused refugee resettlement, ended birthright citizenship, and brought back the death penalty for certain crimes against federal agents.

With the end of “catch and release” and the return of policies such as “remain in Mexico,” those seeking asylum will no longer be able to live and work in the United States while awaiting adjudication of their claims.

Those policies under President Joe Biden were a significant factor in attracting some 11 million illegal immigrants into the country in four years, experts have said.

Another executive order directs the attorney general to seek capital punishment for the murder of law enforcement officers and for capital crimes committed by illegal immigrants.

Ending birthright citizenship will likely spark legal challenges.

Birthright citizenship is addressed in the 14th Amendment to the Constitution, which states that “all persons born or naturalized in the United States, and subject to the jurisdiction thereof, are citizens of the United States and of the state wherein they reside.”

Trump’s order hinges on the “subject to the jurisdiction thereof” part of the amendment, stating that the federal government will not recognize automatic birthright citizenship for children born to illegal immigrant parents.

Trump also rescinded multiple Biden executive orders related to the border and immigration.

image-5795987
A chart depicting illegal immigration data is displayed on a screen as former President Donald Trump speaks during a campaign rally at Grand Sierra Resort in Reno, Nev., on Oct. 11, 2024. Alejandra Rubio/AFP via Getty Images

In his executive action, Trump referenced “unprecedented regulatory oppression” from the previous administration, which he estimates has “imposed almost $50,000 in costs on the average American household.”

He ordered the heads of all executive departments and agencies to “deliver emergency price relief, consistent with applicable law, to the American people and increase the prosperity of the American worker.” The measures will include expanding the housing supply, eliminating administrative expenses and rent-seeking practices that add to health care costs, and removing requirements that raise the costs of home appliances.

Trump, according to the memorandum, will abolish “harmful, coercive ‘climate’ policies that increase the costs of food and fuel.”

In his inaugural address, the president said that today’s high inflation rates had been caused by overspending and by ballooning energy prices.

Cumulative inflation has surged about 21 percent over the past four years. Trump will begin his second term with an annual inflation rate of 2.9 percent, compared to 1.4 percent when he left office.

Economists have said that Trump’s economic agenda, especially his proposed tariffs, could rekindle the inflation flame by making production more expensive and raising consumer prices.

U.S. Treasury secretary nominee Scott Bessent dismissed these concerns during his confirmation hearing before the Senate Finance Committee last week, saying that a layered-in approach could offset a spike in prices. Additionally, he said that U.S. dollar appreciation, cheaper foreign exports, and changes to consumer preferences could counteract potential adverse effects.

image-5795978
Treasury secretary nominee, Scott Bessent, testifies before the Senate Committee on Finance at the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 16, 2025. Madalina Vasiliu/The Epoch Times

The president presented a broad trade memorandum that directs federal agencies, including the Treasury, Commerce, and Homeland Security departments, to examine unfair trade relationships and currency policies with other countries, particularly Canada, Mexico, and China.

Trump will not impose new levies on other nations.

This does not mean he will abandon his pursuit of tariffs. Speaking to reporters from the White House, Trump said he will consider imposing 25 percent tariffs on Canada and Mexico on Feb. 1 because of their trade policies. The president said he will consider putting levies on the Chinese regime if it does not approve a TikTok deal.

In his inaugural address, he also pledged to overhaul the trade system.

“Instead of taxing our citizens to enrich other countries, we will tariff and tax foreign countries to enrich our citizens,” he said.

Trump told reporters: “You put a universal tariff on anybody doing business in the United States, because they’re coming in and they’re stealing our wealth, they’re stealing our jobs, they’re stealing our companies. They’re hurting our companies.”

The president reiterated his plan to establish an External Revenue Service to collect all tariffs, duties, and revenues from foreign businesses and countries.

Tariffs were a chief tenet of his election campaign. He vowed to impose 10 percent to 20 percent universal levies on all U.S. importers and 60 percent to 100 percent tariffs on Chinese products arriving in the United States. Shortly after the November 2024 election, Trump threatened 25 percent tariffs on Canada and Mexico if they didn’t curb illegal immigration and fentanyl trafficking.

image-5795982
Containers including some from China Shipping, a conglomerate under the direct administration of China's State Council, are stacked at the Port of Long Beach in Long Beach, Calif., on July 6, 2018. Frederic J. Brown/AFP via Getty Images

The order also ends any negotiations regarding the organization’s global pandemic treaty, and it instructs the secretary of state to inform the top ranks of the WHO and the United Nations. The Senate overwhelmingly confirmed Sen. Marco Rubio (R-Fla.) to that position earlier on Jan. 20.

Trump previously withdrew the United States from the WHO in 2020, against the backdrop of the COVID-19 pandemic. Biden rejoined the organization soon after taking office. The order revokes the Biden administration communication to rejoin.

It will take a year to formally disenroll from the pact, but the move signals that the nation’s energy policy will no longer adhere to global carbon emission goals.

“The United States will not sabotage our own industries while China pollutes with impunity,” Trump said on Jan. 20.

“You know, China, they use a lot of ‘dirty’ energy, but they produce a lot of energy and when that stuff goes up in the air, you know, [it] doesn’t stay there ... it floats into the United States of America.”

It is difficult to “fight for cleaner air” when “dirty air is dropping all over us,” Trump said. “Unless everybody does it, it just doesn’t work.”

Withdrawing from the climate pact will save taxpayers $1 trillion, according to the White House.

image-5795980
A television broadcasts President Donald Trump's announcement that he is withdrawing the United States from the Paris Climate Accord, at the New York Stock Exchange on June 1, 2017. Bryan R. Smith/AFP via Getty Images

“We will drill, baby, drill,” Trump said to rousing applause during his inaugural address, noting that the United States has more oil and gas than any country on Earth. “We are going to use it,” he said.

Under his “Unleash American Energy” executive order, the president can streamline permitting, loosen regulations, and “use all necessary resources to build critical infrastructure” such as pipelines and expanded electric grids.

“We will bring prices down, fill our strategic reserves up again, right to the top, and export American energy all over the world,” Trump said in his inaugural address. “We will be a rich nation again, and it is that liquid gold under our feet that will help to do it.”

Trump directed the Department of the Interior to restore oil and gas leasing on 13 million acres in Alaska’s 23-million-acre National Petroleum Reserve, reinstating an order from his first term that was reversed by Biden.

At least two orders unplugged Biden executive orders that placed restrictions on offshore drilling across 625 million acres off the East and West coasts only weeks ago.

image-5795986
A part of the Trans Alaska Pipeline System runs through boreal forest past Alaska Range mountains near Delta Junction, Alaska, on May 5, 2023. The 800-mile-long pipeline carries oil from the North Slope in Prudhoe Bay to the port of Valdez. Mario Tama/Getty Images

Trump and Republican congressional leaders have vowed to dismember the massive IRA, a signature bill of Biden’s “Green New Deal,” alongside the 2021 Bipartisan Infrastructure Law and the 2022 CHIPS & Science Act.

The IRA alone authorizes 10 years of sustained tax credits, low-interest loans, and grant programs that by some estimates could top $1 trillion.

Untangling the IRA will require legislation. Some of its provisions are popular, including in Republican congressional districts.

The president also overturned a December 2021 executive order requiring that all vehicles the government procures be emission-free by 2035. Light-body vehicles would have had to meet that mark by 2027.

Another new executive order establishes as U.S. policy an intention to eliminate electric vehicle subsidies and to eliminate state fuel emissions waivers. California introduced its Clean Air Act waiver as a regulatory driver of electric vehicle adoption.

The president said his orders make good on his promises to U.S. autoworkers.

image-5795984
President Joe Biden walks near Chevy vehicles as he arrives to deliver remarks during a visit to the General Motors Factory ZERO electric vehicle assembly plant in Detroit on Nov. 17, 2021. Mandel Ngan/AFP via Getty Images

“You’ll be able to buy the car of your choice,” he said. “We will build automobiles in America again at a rate that nobody could have dreamt possible just a few years ago.”

Biden’s August 2021 executive order directed the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) to work on new emissions standards.

Consequently, an EPA rule, finalized earlier this year, required automakers to tighten tailpipe emissions standards in a gradual fashion through 2032.

He announced the rescission of a slate of executive orders, with the goal of improving government workers’ accountability. Another executive order requires that all federal workers return to in-person work, noting that “only 6 percent of employees currently work in person.”

Another executive order formalizes the new Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE). It repurposes the U.S. Digital Service to serve as a White House-based U.S. DOGE Service. Additionally, it creates a time-limited service organization to administer DOGE.

It also mandates DOGE teams of at least four people across all federal agencies. Software modernization is a key focus of the DOGE executive order, in line with the tech-forward outlook of DOGE’s leader to date, Elon Musk.

image-5795616
Elon Musk speaks following the inauguration of President Donald Trump during an event at Capital One Arena in Washington on Jan. 20, 2025. Madalina Vasiliu/The Epoch Times

“Never again will the immense power of the state be weaponized to persecute political opponents, something I know something about,” Trump said in his inaugural address.

The executive order establishes as policy that federal employees cannot restrain U.S. citizens’ free speech or use money from taxpayers to that end.

It also directs the attorney general to prepare a report to address abuses against U.S. citizens’ free speech under the Biden administration.

While on the campaign trail, the president outlined his plans for a day one executive order targeting restrictions on speech, often carried out by big tech firms under pressure from the federal government.

Trump added that he would swiftly purge the federal government of those who facilitated domestic censorship and would keep federal funds from going to initiatives that would empower certain groups to determine what qualifies as “misinformation” or “disinformation.”

While advocates of such programs say they combat falsehoods online, especially those spread by unfriendly state actors, opponents say that recent campaigns against misinformation and disinformation have targeted many U.S. citizens on political grounds.

Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg, who attended Trump’s inauguration alongside Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos and other tech titans, previously divulged that the Biden administration pressured Facebook to carry out ideological censorship.
image-5795990
(L–R) Priscilla Chan, Meta founder Mark Zuckerberg, Lauren Sanchez, Amazon founder Jeff Bezos, Alphabet and Google CEO Sundar Pichai, and Tesla CEO Elon Musk attend President Trump's inauguration ceremony in the U.S. Capitol Rotunda on Jan. 20, 2025. Chip Somodevilla/POOL/AFP via Getty Images

The executive order calls government censorship “intolerable in a free society.”

“To stop the weaponization of law enforcement and our government, I will also sign an order directing every federal agency to preserve all records pertaining to political persecutions under the last administration, of which there were many, and beginning the process of exposing any and all abuses of power, even though he’s pardoned many of these people,” Trump said shortly before signing that and other executive orders, and referring to Biden’s preemptive pardons.

Trump’s executive order on the weaponization of government directs the attorney general to investigate cases over the past several years that appear to fit a pattern of weaponization in the Department of Justice and other agencies, and to prepare a report outlining the alleged abuses.

It similarly directs the director of national intelligence to probe possible abuses by U.S. intelligence agencies.

The executive order instructs the federal bureaucracy “to comply with applicable document-retention policies and legal obligations.”

Cases in which employees defy the order “will be referred to the attorney general,” it states.

image-5795989
President Donald Trump speaks after taking the oath of office in the U.S. Capitol Rotunda on Jan. 20, 2025. Kenny Holston-Pool/Getty Images

The executive order criticizes a 2019 memoir by former national security adviser John Bolton, describing it as “rife with sensitive information drawn from his time in government.”

The order revokes the security clearances of Bolton as well as 49 intelligence officials involved in the 2020 Hunter Biden laptop analysis, including former Director of National Intelligence James Clapper, former CIA Director John Brennan, and former Defense Secretary Leon Panetta.

Trump pardoned roughly 1,500 people who were charged in connection with that event while commuting the sentences of 14 others. Those who have been pardoned include former Proud Boys leader Enrique Tarrio.

“You’re going to see a lot of action on the J6 hostages,” Trump said earlier in the day at the Capitol.

Trump’s pardons for Jan. 6 defendants were issued hours after Biden released a slew of his own preemptive pardons.

Those Biden pardoned included Dr. Anthony Fauci, Gen. Mark Milley, and members of the Jan. 6 congressional committee, including former Rep. Liz Cheney (R-Wyo.).
image-5795991
The D.C. Central Detention Facility in Washington on Jan. 20, 2025. President Donald Trump pardoned roughly 1,500 Jan. 6 defendants after taking office for his second term. Bryan Woolston/Getty Images

“Why are we trying to help a guy like Milley?” Trump asked on Jan. 20. “Why are we helping Liz Cheney?”

After a 14-hour shutdown over the weekend as the original deadline of Jan. 19 approached, TikTok resumed service in the United States, after Trump signaled that he would grant the company an extension.
Last week, the Supreme Court upheld the divest-or-ban law, citing valid national security concerns due to TikTok’s “scale and susceptibility to foreign adversary control” and the “vast swaths of sensitive data the platform collects.”
ByteDance, TikTok, and TikTok content creators challenged the law soon after it was enacted in April 2024. They brought their case to the nation’s highest court after a federal appeals court denied their claims on First Amendment grounds.
At the core of the transaction is the algorithm owned by China-based ByteDance, without which TikTok wouldn’t be the same. The Chinese regime on Jan. 20 indicated for the first time that it would be open to a transaction to allow TikTok to operate in the United States after consistently rejecting any deal for divestiture, citing technology transfer concerns.

Previous attempts by Oracle and Walmart to acquire ByteDance’s U.S. operations fell apart in 2021.

This executive order is Trump’s second one addressing TikTok. In August 2020, during his first term, he issued an executive order to ban the video app over national security concerns. TikTok sued and had that order overturned with a court order in December 2020.
image-5796110
A news ticker shows information about TikTok outside the Fox News building in New York City on Jan.19, 2025. Kena Betancur/AFP via Getty Images

“This week, I will also end the government policy of trying to socially engineer race and gender into every aspect of public and private life,” Trump said in his inaugural address. “We will forge a society that is color-blind and merit-based.”

The new order ends all federal programs and preferences that are based on race, sex, gender, or any other immutable characteristics. It also instructs the director of the Office of Management and Budget and the attorney general to terminate all “discriminatory programs, including illegal DEI and ‘diversity, equity, inclusion, and accessibility’ (DEIA) mandates, policies, programs, preferences, and activities in the Federal Government, under whatever name they appear.”

A White House statement said Trump will “freeze bureaucrat hiring except in essential areas to end the onslaught of useless and overpaid DEI activists buried into the federal workforce.”

The Biden administration prioritized DEI efforts, which often encourage hiring practices that give advantages based on metrics including gender and race.

“As of today, it will henceforth be the official policy of the United States government that there are only two genders—male and female,” Trump said in his inaugural address.

image-5795979
Gender neutral signs are posted in the 21C Museum Hotel public restrooms in Durham, N.C., on May 10, 2016. Sara D. Davis/Getty Images

Trump’s executive order defines a female as “a person belonging at conception to the sex that produces the large reproductive cell,” which refers to eggs or ova.

The definition does not distinguish gender and sex based on chromosomes, bypassing the issue of those who may have an irregular combination of chromosomes.

The federal government will no longer “promote” gender ideology and will revoke the Biden administration’s efforts to expand Title IX to include gender identity.

“We will restore the name of a great president, William McKinley, to Mount McKinley, where it should be and where it belongs,” Trump said in his inaugural address.

Mount McKinley received its original name in 1896 from prospector William Dickey, who named it after then-presidential candidate William McKinley. President Barack Obama renamed it Denali in 2015, a name long used by Native American tribes in the area.

Trump also said the Gulf of Mexico will be renamed the Gulf of America.

The Department of the Interior will oversee changes to any reference in laws, maps, regulations, documents, papers, or other U.S. records to ensure they refer to the basin as the Gulf of America.

image-5796112
Richard Mount and Thomas Page's 1700 map of the Gulf of Mexico. Public Domain












































Executive Order 13986

Ensuring a Lawful and Accurate Enumeration and Apportionment Pursuant to the Decennial Census

Revocation of Order

Executive Order 13987

Organizing and Mobilizing the United States Government To Provide a Unified and Effective Response To Combat COVID-19 and To Provide United States Leadership on Global Health and Security

Revocation of Order

Executive Order 13988

Preventing and Combating Discrimination on the Basis of Gender Identity or Sexual Orientation

Revocation of Order

Executive Order 13989

Ethics Commitments by Executive Branch Personnel

Revocation of Order

Executive Order 13990

Protecting Public Health and the Environment and Restoring Science To Tackle the Climate Crisis

Revocation of Order

Executive Order 13992

Revocation of Certain Executive Orders Concerning Federal Regulation

Revocation of Order

Executive Order 13993

Revision of Civil Immigration Enforcement Policies and Priorities

Revocation of Order

Executive Order 13995

Ensuring an Equitable Pandemic Response and Recovery

Revocation of Order

Executive Order 13996

Establishing the COVID-19 Pandemic Testing Board and Ensuring a Sustainable Public Health Workforce for COVID-19 and Other Biological Threats

Revocation of Order

Executive Order 13997

Improving and Expanding Access to Care and Treatments for COVID-19

Revocation of Order

Executive Order 13999

Protecting Worker Health and Safety

Revocation of Order

Executive Order 14000

Supporting the Reopening and Continuing Operation of Schools and Early Childhood Education Providers

Revocation of Order

Executive Order 14002

Economic Relief Related to the COVID-19 Pandemic

Revocation of Order

Executive Order 14003

Protecting the Federal Workforce

Revocation of Order

Executive Order 14004

Enabling All Qualified Americans To Serve Their Country in Uniform

Revocation of Order

Executive Order 14006

Reforming Our Incarceration System To Eliminate the Use of Privately Operated Criminal Detention Facilities

Revocation of Order

Executive Order 14007

President’s Council of Advisors on Science and Technology

Revocation of Order

Executive Order 14008

Tackling the Climate Crisis at Home and Abroad

Revocation of Order

Executive Order 14009

Strengthening Medicaid and the Affordable Care Act

Revocation of Order

Executive Order 14010

Creating a Comprehensive Regional Framework To Address the Causes of Migration, To Manage Migration Throughout North and Central America, and To Provide Safe and Orderly Processing of Asylum Seekers at the United States Border

Revocation of Order

Executive Order 14011

Establishment of Interagency Task Force on the Reunification of Families

Revocation of Order

Executive Order 14012

Restoring Faith in Our Legal Immigration Systems and Strengthening Integration and Inclusion Efforts for New Americans

Revocation of Order

Executive Order 14013

Rebuilding and Enhancing Programs To Resettle Refugees and Planning for the Impact of Climate Change on Migration

Revocation of Order

Executive Order 14015

Establishment of the White House Office of Faith-Based and Neighborhood Partnerships

Revocation of Order

Executive Order 14018

Revocation of Certain Presidential Actions

Revocation of Order

Executive Order 14019

Promoting Access to Voting

Revocation of Order

Executive Order 14020

Establishment of the White House Gender Policy Council

Revocation of Order

Executive Order 14021

Guaranteeing an Educational Environment Free From Discrimination on the Basis of Sex, Including Sexual Orientation or Gender Identity

Revocation of Order

Executive Order 14022

Termination of Emergency With Respect to the International Criminal Court

Revocation of Order

Executive Order 14023

Establishment of the Presidential Commission on the Supreme Court of the United States

Revocation of Order

Executive Order 14027

Establishment of the Climate Change Support Office

Revocation of Order

Executive Order 14029

Revocation of Certain Presidential Actions and Technical Amendment

Revocation of Order

Executive Order 14030

Climate-Related Financial Risk

Revocation of Order

Executive Order 14031

Advancing Equity, Justice, and Opportunity for Asian Americans, Native Hawaiians, and Pacific Islanders

Revocation of Order

Executive Order 14035

Diversity, Equity, Inclusion, and Accessibility in the Federal Workforce

Revocation of Order

Executive Order 14037

Strengthening American Leadership in Clean Cars and Trucks

Revocation of Order

Executive Order 14044

Amending Executive Order 14007

Revocation of Order

Executive Order 14045

White House Initiative on Advancing Educational Equity, Excellence, and Economic Opportunity for Hispanics

Revocation of Order

Executive Order 14049

White House Initiative on Advancing Educational Equity, Excellence, and Economic Opportunity for Native Americans and Strengthening Tribal Colleges and Universities

Revocation of Order

Executive Order 14050

White House Initiative on Advancing Educational Equity, Excellence, and Economic Opportunity for Black Americans

Revocation of Order

Executive Order 14052

Implementation of the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act

Revocation of Order

Executive Order 14055

Nondisplacement of Qualified Workers Under Service Contracts

Revocation of Order

Executive Order 14057

Catalyzing Clean Energy Industries and Jobs Through Federal Sustainability

Revocation of Order

Executive Order 14060

Establishing the United States Council on Transnational Organized Crime

Revocation of Order

Executive Order 14069

Advancing Economy, Efficiency, and Effectiveness in Federal Contracting by Promoting Pay Equity and Transparency

Revocation of Order

Executive Order 14070

Continuing To Strengthen Americans’ Access to Affordable, Quality Health Coverage

Revocation of Order

Executive Order 14074

Advancing Effective, Accountable Policing and Criminal Justice Practices To Enhance Public Trust and Public Safety

Revocation of Order

Executive Order 14075

Advancing Equality for Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender, Queer, and Intersex Individuals

Revocation of Order

Executive Order 14082

Implementation of the Energy and Infrastructure Provisions of the Inflation Reduction Act of 2022

Revocation of Order

Executive Order 14084

Promoting the Arts, the Humanities, and Museum and Library Services

Revocation of Order

Executive Order 14087

Lowering Prescription Drug Costs for Americans

Revocation of Order

Executive Order 14089

Establishing the President’s Advisory Council on African Diaspora Engagement in the United States

Revocation of Order

Executive Order 14091

Further Advancing Racial Equity and Support for Underserved Communities Through the Federal Government

Revocation of Order

Presidential Memorandum

Withdrawal of Certain Areas off the United States Arctic Coast of the Outer Continental Shelf from Oil or Gas Leasing

Revocation of Action

Executive Order 14094

Modernizing Regulatory Review

Revocation of Order

Executive Order 14096

Revitalizing Our Nation’s Commitment to Environmental Justice for All

Revocation of Order

Executive Order 14099

Moving Beyond COVID-19 Vaccination Requirements for Federal Workers

Revocation of Order

Executive Order 14110

Safe, Secure, and Trustworthy Development and Use of Artificial Intelligence

Revocation of Order

Executive Order 14115

Imposing Certain Sanctions on Persons Undermining Peace, Security, and Stability in the West Bank

Revocation of Order

Executive Order 14124

White House Initiative on Advancing Educational Equity, Excellence, and Economic Opportunity Through Hispanic-Serving Institutions

Revocation of Order

Executive Order 14134

Providing an Order of Succession Within the Department of Agriculture

Revocation of Order

Executive Order 14135

Providing an Order of Succession Within the Department of Homeland Security

Revocation of Order

Executive Order 14136

Providing an Order of Succession Within the Department of Justice

Revocation of Order

Executive Order 14137

Providing an Order of Succession Within the Department of the Treasury

Revocation of Order

Executive Order 14138

Providing an Order of Succession Within the Office of Management and Budget

Revocation of Order

Executive Order 14139

Providing an Order of Succession Within the Office of the National Cyber Director

Revocation of Order

Presidential Memorandum

Designation of Officials of the Council on Environmental Quality to Act as Chairman

Revocation of Action

Presidential Memorandum

Designation of Officials of the Office of Personnel Management to Act as Director

Revocation of Action

Presidential Memorandum

Designation of Officials of the Office of Science and Technology Policy to Act as Director

Revocation of Action

Presidential Memorandum

Designation of Officials of the United States Agency for Global Media to Act as Chief Executive Officer

Revocation of Action

Presidential Memorandum

Designation of Officials of the United States Agency for International Development to Act as Administrator

Revocation of Action

Presidential Memorandum

Designation of Officials of the United States International Development Finance Corporation to Act as Chief Executive Officer

Revocation of Action

Presidential Memorandum

Withdrawal of Certain Areas of the United States Outer Continental Shelf from Oil or Natural Gas Leasing

Revocation of Action

Presidential Memorandum

Certification of Rescission of Cuba’s Designation as a State Sponsor of Terrorism

Revocation of Action

Presidential Memorandum

Revocation of National Security Presidential Memorandum 5

Revocation of Action

Executive Order 14143

Providing for the Appointment of Alumni of AmeriCorps to the Competitive Service

Revocation of Order