Wednesday, January 14, 2026

Trump says he will cancel all Biden executive orders signed by autopen – live

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Trump says he’s cancelling all executive orders signed by Joe Biden using an autopen

Donald Trump has said that he is cancelling all executive orders signed by his predecessor Joe Biden using an autopen.

In a post on his Truth Social platform, Trump wrote: “Any document signed by Sleepy Joe Biden with the Autopen, which was approximately 92% of them, is hereby terminated, and of no further force or effect.”

He goes on to claim that “the Radical Left Lunatics circling Biden … took the Presidency away from him” and suggests without evidence that other individuals had signed documents on Biden’s behalf using an autopen.

I am hereby cancelling all Executive Orders, and anything else that was not directly signed by Crooked Joe Biden, because the people who operated the Autopen did so illegally.

Trump has frequently belittled his predecessor and repeatedly alleged that Biden was addled by the end of his term in office and not really the one making decisions.

Without evidence, he has claimed many times that Biden administration officials may have forged their boss’s signature by using the autopen and taken broad actions he was not aware of.

Trump has also obsessively cast doubt on the validity of pardons and other documents that Biden signed with an autopen, even though for decades other presidents before him have also relied on the device to sign key papers. Trump himself has also used an autopen in the past.

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Ed Whelan, a senior fellow at the Ethics and Public Policy Center, has posted some legal insight on X on whether or not Trump can nullify anything Biden signed using an autopen.

He writes: “Donald Trump is free to revoke all of Biden’s executive orders, whether or not Biden personally signed them. But he doesn’t have the same freedom with respect to ‘anything else’ (e.g., bills enacted by Congress, pardons) that Biden directed be signed by autopen.”

Whelan cites an opinion issued in 2005 by the DOJ’s Office of Legal Counsel “that the president may ‘sign’ a bill (within the meaning of the governing constitutional provision) by directing a subordinate to affix the president’s signature to the bill, including by autopen.”

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