List of executive actions by Donald Trump


Listed below are executive orders numbered 13765–13984, presidential proclamations, presidential memoranda, presidential determinations, administrative orders, presidential notices, presidential sequestration orders, and national security presidential memoranda signed by U.S. president Donald Trump. In his first term he issued a total of 894 executive actions, of which 220 were executive orders.

45th presidency (first term)

National security presidential memoranda

Title / DescriptionDate signedDate publishedFR CitationFR Doc. Number
1Regarding Rebuilding the U.S. Armed ForcesJanuary 27, 2017February 1, 201782 FR 89832017-02282
2Regarding the Organization of the National Security Council and the Homeland Security CouncilJanuary 28, 2017February 2, 201782 FR 91192017-02381
3Regarding the Plan to Defeat the Islamic State of Iraq and SyriaJanuary 28, 2017February 2, 201782 FR 91252017-02386
4Regarding the Organization of the National Security Council, the Homeland Security Council, and SubcommitteesApril 4, 2017April 6, 201782 FR 168812017-07064
5Regarding the Strengthening the Policy of the United States Toward CubaJune 16, 2017October 20, 201782 FR 488752017-22928
6Regarding the Elevation of U.S. Cyber Command to a Unified Combatant CommandAugust 18, 2017August 23, 201782 FR 399532017-17947
7Regarding the Integration, Sharing, and Use of National Security Threat Actor Information to Protect AmericansOctober 5, 2017

Discrepancies between White House versions and ''Federal Register'' versions

In February 2017, a review of presidential documents by USA Today showed that the White House posted inaccurate texts of Trump's executive orders on its website, conflicting with the official versions published in the Federal Register. Most of the differences were minor grammatical or typographic changes, but there were "two cases where the original text referred to inaccurate or non-existent provisions of law." This raised concerns among advocates for government transparency; the executive director of the Sunlight Foundation said that the "last-minute edits" to the orders indicated problems with the Trump administration's "vetting, sign-off, and publication processes for executive orders." The inaccuracies also prompted concern because the Federal Register versions of presidential documents are often published several days after they are signed, "meaning that the public must often rely on what the White House puts out." In the order on ethics guidelines for federal appointees, the WhiteHouse.gov section cites "section 207 of title 28, United States Code," which ProPublica found does not exist. The correct citation, made in the Federal Register version, is section 207 of title 18. Presidential determination no. 11 is not on whitehouse.gov, however, it is in the Federal Register.