These two things sound almost exactly the same but are drastically different. As has been mentioned here a few times, people have caught on to the fact that the White House Press Secretary and other members of Biden's team have been referring to everything as executive ACTIONS. While the media has reported them as both executive actions as well as executive orders.
Executive Orders are signed into law immediately and appear on the federalregister.gov page. These actions go into affect right away as we all know and reversing them has to be done through the legal system.
Executive ACTIONS...well....they do nothing essentially. They draw attention to the matter...that is it.
Essentially, Biden is signing all these executive ACTIONS, which the media will falsely report as ORDERS to give the perception that things are being done right away. The Paris Climate deal he signed...ACTION...the food stamp one he just signed...ACTION.
So the question is....why?
Now, if these appear in the federalregister.gov page here in the next few days, it typically takes 6-7 days for these to appear from what I've seen looking through President Trumps, then obviously, I'm incorrect. But so far, his people are all referring to them as ACTIONS.
Thanks for the post anon. WWG1WGA
It's like playing pretend with action figures!
Ugh, now I am actually starting to feel vaguely sorry for senile Slow Joe Crow. And that shouldn't be!
Sorry for the man, but not for his behavior which he is now experiencing the consequences.
Yeah, kinda.
And then, simultaneous, not even sorry for the man, because he has been a glad-handing force for lies and destruction for decades.
More just like... damn, he's now nothing but a pathetic sight, a wasted mess.
Good theory, but why are they all clearly called Executive Orders on the whitehouse.gov briefing page. They look just like the ones Trump signed.
Check this out. From an earlier post:
https://www.federalregister.gov/presidential-documents/executive-orders
Exactly:
Executive Orders are issued by the White House and are used to direct the Executive Branch of the U.S. Government. Executive Orders state mandatory requirements for the Executive Branch, and have the effect of law. In short, an executive order is a signed, written, and published directive from the President of the United States that manages operations of the Executive branch of the federal government.
They have no bearing or effect on anyone or anything else, other than the Executive Branch of the Federal government.
Executive actions, by contrast, bear little weight. They’re not published in the Federal Register and aren’t subject to legal review. But these so-called threats-to-orders often draw reactions as sharp as the responses to orders themselves.
Fren in earlier post put this out:
https://www.federalregister.gov/presidential-documents/executive-orders