“In his first ten days in office, President-elect Biden will take decisive action to address … four crises, prevent other urgent and irreversible harms, and restore America’s place in the world,” according to a memo by Ron Klain, the incoming administration’s chief of staff.
Klain explained Biden will focus on fighting the CCP (Chinese Communist Party) virus pandemic, the economic crisis that it caused, as well as addressing climate change and racial injustice concerns that the incoming administration claims are the most urgent crises in the country.
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Biden’s plan will involve signing a series of executive orders, beginning with an order for the Department of Education to increase the existing pause on student loan repayments and interest for millions of Americans on day one. Biden will further take executive action to rejoin the United Nations 2015 Paris climate agreement, from which the United States ultimately departed on Nov. 4, and reverse a travel ban that limited entry into the United States of foreign citizens who were considered a threat to America.
He will further launch his “100 Day Masking Challenge,” which will demand individuals to wear masks on federal property and inter-state travel, in an effort to restrain the number of CCP virus cases. Meanwhile, the president-election will further sign action to increase nationwide limitations on evictions and foreclosures, which is expected to impact more than 25 million Americans.
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Biden’s plan would likewise involve intentions to reform the criminal justice system, policies to encourage his “Buy American” vision, climate change, health care, and immigration.
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The news of Biden's plans appears as the US Senate prepares for the impeachment trial of President Trump, some are as wary of the unintended consequences as the president’s successor.
Though a combative impeachment trial would act as an obstacle to those intentions, according to William Galston of the Brookings Institution, who served as a domestic policy aide for President Bill Clinton. “I think that it’s very clear based on what the president-elect has said, and not said, that this is about the last thing he wanted — especially now,” Mr Galston announced. “It presents a practical problem, and it presents a political problem.”
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Now that President Trump has been accused of “incitement to insurrection” in the House of Representatives for whipping up the masses that attacked the Capitol, the article of impeachment must be “walked over” to the Senate, where a trial will occur.