Donald Trump has been in office for five days, and yet he has already imposed his will on Washington with ruthless speed and efficiency, showing that even his most radical campaign promises were far from just bluster.
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The Republican president has taken the first steps toward fulfilling his vow of remaking a federal bureaucracy he believes was hostile to him during his 2017-2021 presidency, reassigning or firing hundreds of civil servants in simultaneous moves against a swath of agencies.
He has rushed the military to the southern border, fired the head of the U.S. Coast Guard and challenged decades of constitutional law with a series of wide-ranging executive orders — 26 of them issued within hours of taking office — that cover everything from environmental regulations to America's citizenship rules.
In perhaps the most audacious move of all, he pardoned about 1,500 supporters who took part in the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the U.S. Capitol, the global symbol of American democracy.
Trump's allies have compared his shock-and-awe opening foray to a special forces raid that has caught federal workers, unions, advocacy groups and even the media off-guard in its scope.
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