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Former WH Officials urge Biden to embrace executive action

President-elect Joe Biden won the presidency in large part because he promised to be the anti-Trump on policy, temperament, tone and just about everything else. But two men who helped run the Obama White House are urging him to follow President Trump’s example in a specific way: by unapologetically leaning on executive actions to implement key policies. President Obama  late in his term, was using executive actions to advance much of his agenda in the face of congressional opposition. President Trump has been impenitent about taking such actions. Some Democrats today think that should be President-elect Joe Biden’s approach.

The advice from former Obama chiefs of staff Rahm Emanuel and Denis McDonough comes as Biden prepares to enter office with an agenda potentially stalled by a closely divided Congress, a much smaller House majority than expected and a 50-50 Senate, at best.

“There is — as President Trump himself has demonstrated with the consent, quite obvious consent of Republicans in Congress — an enormous amount of scope for the president to institute executive action on things like immigration and energy and climate policy,” McDonough, who served as chief of staff for much of President Barack Obama’s second termsaid to a news media interview.

Obama himself signed many high-profile executive orders and pushed for broad administrative rules changes on environment, education, immigration and labor policies. But unlike Trump, most of Obama’s high-profile orders came once his party lost its majorities in Congress and major legislation was no longer an option.

“Trump changes that, and moves aggressively on executive orders — a multitude of them on multiple fronts,” said  Rahm Emanuel, Obama’s first chief of staff. “Everything on immigration, etc., without any legislation.”

Many orders are already in the works. Speaking to local news media on Thursday, incoming Biden chief of staff Ron Klain promised a “sack” of executive orders Biden will sign on his first day in the Oval Office.

Many of those actions will amount to a redoing of Obama administration policies that Trump has spent four years undoing: “Protecting the DREAMers, for example, starting on Day 1,” Klain said, referring to the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program Trump tried to end. “Rejoining the Paris accords for climate change starting on Day 1, reversing some of the environmental rollbacks we’ve seen from President Trump.”

Large swaths of Biden’s pandemic response will involve executive actions, too, including tapping the Defense Production Act to manufacture more personal protective equipment and setting up a World War II-inspired “Pandemic Testing Board” to coordinate and speed up test distribution across the country.

But the sweeping, New Deal-style agenda Biden promised was premised on the idea of winning control of the Senate, in addition to keeping the big majority that House Democrats won in 2018. That’s not the landscape Biden will face in January.

Still, McDonough, Emanuel and other Democrats are confident Biden can deliver many of the same results through the executive branch.

“There’s no reason that President-elect Biden should not use the authority that’s available to him,” said McDonough, who’s now a professor at the University of Notre Dame’s Keough School of Global Affairs.

Neither man is arguing Biden should ignore the legislative branch where he served as a senator for decades. McDonough said, “There are certain things you just have to do with Congress.”

Biden himself talked frequently during the campaign about his experience working across the aisle and the need for bipartisan cooperation. In his post-election speeches, he has repeatedly called for an end to gridlock and constant partisan warfare.

But Emanuel, who ran the White House during Obama’s window of large legislative majorities, knows perhaps more than anyone that political capital can be limited. So, he argued that Biden should pack as much as possible into executive orders. “The fewer things you have to clog up the legislative pipeline with allows you to concentrate your political capital in that legislative front,” he said.

The climate agenda

Biden has made it clear he’ll make climate change a top priority. At first glance, his much-discussed $2 trillion plan to wean the economy off fossil fuel and onto clean energy seems dead on arrival if there is a Republican Senate, but Jamal Raad, the co-founder of climate advocacy group Evergreen Action, has flagged more than 40 broad executive actions in the climate policies the Biden campaign has already laid out.

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