President Donald Trump began his second administration with a blitz of policy actions to reorient U.S. government priorities.
Trump's executive orders are set to reshape Affordable Care Act provisions, potentially impacting millions in states like Florida and Texas.
The move is one of many executive actions focused on the federal workforce enacted since Trump took office Monday afternoon. His other actions addressed DEI hiring more broadly, froze hiring in most executive agencies and directed a return to in-person work for many federal employees, among other directives.
People claiming the U.S. government would revoke the second lady's citizenship did so with a misunderstanding of a January 2025 executive order.
There's a good reason why Donald Trump's executive order about transgender people should be of concern to everyone.
President Donald Trump wasted no time signing an executive order Monday that aims to give him more control over the federal workforce – whom he has long vilified as the “deep state.”
Donald Trump has rescinded an executive order from President Joe Biden that sought to lower the price of drugs.
"Trump really just said, 'Free expression will no longer be limited,' and 'There are now only two genders, male and female' in the same breath."
Another controversial executive order Trump signed was one aiming to cut off birthright citizenship. Critics immediately pounced on Trump, arguing people born in the United States are granted citizenship under the U.S. Constitution's 14th Amendment even if their birth parents migrated here illegally.
President Trump signed an executive order aiming to end birthright citizenship for children born in the United States to noncitizen parents. Attorneys general from 22 states filed lawsuits in Massachusetts arguing that the order violates the 14th Amendment of the U.S. Constitution.