They've "typically been a honeymoon period for new presidents," as NBC News puts it. The first 100 days most certainly won't be that for Joe Biden, who won't begin his term as president by tackling what he thought he would when he was seeking the nomination. Then he promised to zero in on immigration policy, foreign relations, and climate change out of the gate. Instead, he'll be tasked with guiding the country out of the COVID-19 pandemic and the economic distress it has wrought. What he plans to do during his first 100 days:
- Biden will get things going on Day One. On the docket for Wednesday, per the AP: Biden will mandate the use of masks and social distancing in all federal buildings, on federal lands, and by federal workers; he will move to rejoin the World Health Organization and rejoin the Paris climate accord (it'll take 30 days for the latter to become complete); end the national emergency that Trump declared on the border as well as the so-called "Muslim Travel Ban," ask the Education Department to push the end-date of its pause on federal student loan payments from the end of this month to Sept. 30 and delay evictions and foreclosures as well; establish an 8-year path to citizenship for an estimated 11 million people living in the US without legal status; and more.