Tracking Trump - All of President Trump’s Executive Orders – June 4th, 2025

Tracking Trump - All of President Trump’s Executive Orders – June 4th, 2025 - Driven By Braman Motorcars       

Bottom Line: In the second Trump administration I'm tracking all of President Trump’s executive orders. This story will be updated as he issues them. As of June 4th, he’d signed 157 executive orders compared to 220 signed during the entirety of his first administration and 162 signed by President Biden during his administration. As for the executive orders President Trump has signed thus far...                 

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While President Trump hasn’t signed any new executive orders over the past week, he did amend an existing order and issued a new Presidential Memoranda entitled: Sequestration Order for Fiscal Year 2026 Pursuant to Section 251A of the Balanced Budget and Emergency Deficit Control Act, As Amended. The order states: On October 1, 2025, direct spending budgetary resources for fiscal year 2026 in each non-exempt budget account be reduced by the amount calculated by the Office of Management and Budget in its report to the Congress of May 30, 2025. It sounds pretty wonky, but this order has the potential to be extremely important. October 1st is the new budget year – which presumably will also be when the final version of the OBBB (whatever that will be) will kick in. This order directs spending cuts in every non-exempt categories of federal government spending. The easier way to explain this is to breakout exempt categories which are: Social Security, Medicaid, Medicare, Veterans’ Programs, Low-Income government assistance programs, Federal retirement benefits, unemployment benefits, agricultural programs, Post Office, federal court system and FEMA.  

This presidential directive is an indication that President Trump has every intent to continue implementing DOGE related savings into the next federal budget year regardless of spending levels authorized by congress. In other words, the spending levels authorized by Congress are likely to be the high-water mark for debt and deficit spending with actual federal spending less than the authorized total.  

The amended order was issued through a proclamation entitled: Adjusting Imports of Aluminum and Steel into the United States. This is the directive raising the tariff rate on aluminum and steel imports to 50%. It’s a change in tactics as the president cited the Trade Act of 1974 – as opposed to use of an emergency declaration which he did for his Liberation Day tariffs which are currently under legal scrutiny.  


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