President Donald Trump’s first 100 days in office have shown just how much he likes to act alone.
While past presidents used their honeymoon period to get signature legislation through Congress, Trump has signed very few bills. Instead, he’s focused on a flurry of executive orders, unilaterally imposed tariffs, and mass firings and spending cuts that Congress did not approve but has, so far, let slide.
Here’s a look at 100 actions taken by Trump, his administration and the GOP-controlled Congress over his first 100 days:
Signing laws
• Signed the Laken Riley Act, which allows federal immigration officers to detain and deport undocumented people who have been charged with crimes, in addition to those who have been convicted.
• Signed three Congressional Review Act resolutions that overturn Biden administration regulations and a stopgap funding bill, for a total of five bills — fewer than any president in the last seven decades by this point.
Implementing tariffs
• Announced tariffs on Mexico and Canada, sparking a consumer-led “Buy Canadian” movement that has hurt U.S. companies.
• Announced various tariffs on China that collectively add up to 145%, sparking a trade war with the country.
• Announced sweeping tariffs on every major U.S. trade partner, ranging from 10% to 54%, to take effect on April 2, which he dubbed “Liberation Day.”
• Included the Heard and McDonald islands, which are uninhabited, on the list of countries getting a tariff.
• Admitted that the formula for the tariffs involved looking at the trade deficit with a country and dividing it by the value of goods the U.S. imports from that nation.
• Saw the S&P 500 lose $5 trillion in value over two of the worst days for the stock market in modern history in response to “Liberation Day.”
• “Paused” the sweeping tariffs on nearly every country for 90 days because bond traders were “getting a little queasy.”
• Posted on social media that it would be a “great time to buy” shortly before announcing the pause, raising questions about insider trading.
• Raised the overall average effective tariff rate from 2.5% to around 27%, the highest for the U.S. since 1903.
Cutting government
• Named billionaire Elon Musk as a “special government employee” in charge of a White House team to cut spending.
• Renamed the U.S. Digital Service, which advised agencies on technical issues, into the U.S. DOGE Service (also known as the Department of Government Efficiency, which is not in fact a government department) after a Musk joke.
• Repeatedly said that DOGE was “headed by” Musk, including in a joint address to Congress.
• Told courts that Musk did not head DOGE — or even work for it — and declined to say who did head it, then later identified a little-known employee as its acting administrator.
• Froze billions of dollars in foreign aid and sought to all but dismantle the U.S. Agency for International Development.
• Attempted mass firings at the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, which protects consumers from financial fraud.
• Dramatically cut spending and staff at the Department of Education, which Trump has vowed to abolish (though this would require an act of Congress).
• Slashed staff at the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration who handle weather forecasts, among other things.
• Used police and private security to enter the U.S. Institute of Peace as part of an effort to take control of the nonprofit and gut it.
• Tried to quickly rehire federal workers on critical issues such as bird flu, nuclear weapons and medical devices.
• Ordered the General Services Administration to begin ending leases on roughly 7,500 federal offices around the country.
• Sent 2 million federal workers an email offering to pay them through September if they resigned.
• Required federal workers to write down five accomplishments each week, then didn’t do much with the emails.
• Rehired a member of Musk’s team who resigned after media resurfaced old social media posts in which he said he was “racist before it was cool.”
• Gave some Republican senators Musk’s phone number so they could call him to get problematic DOGE spending cuts reversed.
• Saw widespread protests at Musk-owned Tesla dealerships, plummeting sales of its cars and a 71% drop in profits.
• Promoted Tesla on the White House lawn and said vandalism against the company will be treated as domestic terrorism.
• Reduced the amount of money expected to be saved by the Musk effort from a goal of $1 trillion to $150 billion.
Deporting noncitizens
• Signed an executive order to make it possible to detain migrants at the U.S. military base in Guantanamo Bay.
• Sent two groups of migrants to Guantanamo Bay and released a photo of migrants being boarded onto a military plane.
• Struck a deal to pay El Salvador $6 million to imprison deportees at its notorious CECOT megaprison.
• Invoked the 18th-century Alien Enemies Act, last used to incarcerate Japanese Americans during World War II, to begin deporting people the administration alleges are gang members.
• Sent three planes with more than 200 migrants to El Salvador despite a federal judge’s orders not to deport anyone under the act until his court had held a hearing on the issue.
• Lost two appeals of the continued block on deportations before the Supreme Court, including one released at 12:55 a.m.
• Conceded in a court filing that Maryland resident Kilmar Abrego Garcia was among those deported due to “an administrative error.”
• Fired the Justice Department lawyer who signed that court filing and had been praised by the judge for his candor.
• Appealed a judge’s order to have Abrego Garcia returned from El Salvador, then lost in a unanimous Supreme Court decision.
• Said Abrego Garcia’s return is up to El Salvador, even as President Nayib Bukele claimed he doesn’t “have the power to return him.”
• Detained Columbia University grad student Mahmoud Khalil over his pro-Palestinian activism.
• Detained Tufts University grad student Rümeysa Öztürk, a Turkish citizen, over an editorial she co-authored in the student newspaper.
• Deported a 10-year-old U.S. citizen recovering from brain cancer after detaining her family on their way to a medical checkup.
• Sent two U.S. citizens, including a four-year-old boy with Stage 4 cancer, on a deportation flight to Honduras with their mother.
• Detained 19-year-old U.S. citizen Jose Hermosillo for 10 days over a disputed claim that he had entered the country illegally.
• Said that the administration can’t give everyone it wants to deport a trial because that would take “without exaggeration, 200 years.”
Firing officials
• Fired the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff and two other top military officials late on a Friday in an unusual move.
• Fired the two Democratic commissioners on the Federal Trade Commission in what appeared to be a violation of a 1935 Supreme Court decision.
• Won an emergency appeal to the Supreme Court to stop a lower court ruling that restored the two FTC commissioners to their jobs while their case proceeds.
• Fired the director of the National Security Agency and other top national security officials after a meeting with far-right activist Laura Loomer.
• Fired a pardon attorney who said she believes she was ousted because she refused to restore Mel Gibson’s right to carry a gun.
• Moved to fire the Democratic chairwoman of the Federal Election Commission, who said her firing was invalid and refused to step down.
• Threatened to oust Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell, leading to a spike in gold prices and a slide in the dollar.
• Signed a sweeping executive order to try to bring independent agencies under White House control based on a fringe legal theory.
Targeting law firms
• Stripped security clearances from the law firm Covington & Burling for its work with former special counsel Jack Smith.
• Stripped security clearances from Paul Weiss for hiring a lawyer who worked on the Manhattan district attorney’s case against Trump.
• Stripped security clearances from Perkins Coie for its ties to the Steele dossier during the 2016 election.
• Stripped security clearances from WilmerHale for hiring Robert Mueller and a top aide.








