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First 100 days of Donald Trump's presidency


The first 100 days of Donald Trump's presidency began with his inauguration as the 45th President of the United States, which occurred at noon on January 20, 2017. The 48th Vice President of the United States, Mike Pence, was inaugurated the same day. The 100th day of Trump's presidency will be April 29, 2017. Trump first announced his plan for the first hundred days of his presidency in Gettysburg, Pennsylvania, on October 23, 2016, before the election. By the 75th day, while having achieved none of the legislative goals set forth in his 100-Day plan, Trump did sign a number of executive orders and presidential memoranda in response to his promises in the plan, and on April 10, Trump's nominee Neil Gorsuch took office as a Supreme Court justice, fulfilling a major Trump 100-Day pledge. Using the Congressional Review Act, his administration began the process of overturning eleven regulations finalized during the last months of his immediate predecessor Barack Obama's presidency.

Trump pledged to do the following in his first 100 days:

The first 100 days began with the inauguration on January 20, 2017, at 12:00 pm. This was the third presidential online portal transition and the first to transition social media accounts such as Twitter. As Trump took the oath of office, the official @POTUS Twitter account switched to President Trump with previous tweets archived under @POTUS44. All 13 million followers of the POTUS account during Obama's administration slowly transitioned as well.

On February 8 when Trump formally announced his 24-member-cabinet—the largest cabinet of any President so far—fewer cabinet nominees had been confirmed than any other president except George Washington by the same length of time into his presidency. Trump's reorganization of the cabinet removed the Chair of the Council of Economic Advisers that President Obama had added in 2009. The Director of National Intelligence and Director of the CIA were elevated to cabinet-level. During the transition period, Trump had named a full slate of Cabinet and Cabinet-level nominees, all of which require Senate confirmation except for White House Chief of Staff and the vice presidency.


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