Beden today makes 17 measures to cancel Trump's decisions

New US President Joseph Biden will issue 17 decrees today, shortly after taking office, which abolish the main measures of his predecessor, primarily the US's return to the Paris Agreement on Climate Change and the World Health Organisation (OBSH), said advisers of the future president. As reported, immunologist [...]
New US President Joseph Biden will issue 17 decrees today, shortly after taking office, which abolish the main measures of his predecessor, primarily the US's return to the Paris Agreement on Climate Change and the World Health Organisation (OBSH), said advisers of the future president.
As reported, immunologist Anthony Fauci will speak on behalf of the United States tomorrow at the WHO meeting.
To limit the spread of the virus, which has already claimed 400,000 lives, Beden will sign a decree tomorrow for the mandatory delivery of protective masks to federal buildings.
Beden will also extend the mortorium for the expulsions and re-paying of federal student loans due to lost income due to pandemic.
The Democrat, who underlined the fight against global warming as one of its priorities, will send a letter to the UN today so that the United States can return to the Paris Agreement within a month.
Beden will also consider a series of outgoing administration measures on environmental standards and will revote the mandate given by Donald Trump for the controversial US-Canada oil pipeline project.
On the issue of migration policy, Beden will also take the opposite stance from Trump, whose mandate was marked by the fight against illegal immigration.
Beden will abolish the controversial decree on migration, which prohibits the entry of citizens of predominantly Muslim countries. The move was “rooted in xenophobia and religious enmity”, said Jake Sullivan, a future White House adviser for national security.
The new president of the United States will suspend building the wall on the border with Mexico and financing it from the Pentagon budget, which has triggered fierce political and judicial battles in the past four years.
Beden will submit a draft law on immigration before Congress in parallel. In particular, about 700,000 young people who entered the United States illegally as children and other immigrants with unregulated status will have the opportunity to resolve their status.
The reform also envisions additional funds to strengthen border supervision and controls, as well as a stand-by plan for Salvador, Guatemala and Honduras, where most migrants come from, with $4 billion over the next four years.
When it comes to combating racial inequality, Beden will sign a decree that instructs federal agencies to assess inequalities in their programmes and policies, said Susan Rice, the future director of the Interior Policy Council.
These are only the first announced measures and further decrees and decrees of the new president of the United States are expected in the coming days, Biden advisers said.











