ESTABLISHED 2024 A CIVIC RECORD OF ACTIONS TAKEN AGAINST THE AMERICAN PEOPLE — AND HOW WE RESTORE THEM April 15, 2026
A nonpartisan civic restoration project

UndoTrump.com

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Tracking every rollback, reversal, and overreach — and the path back to the America we know.

975
Actions Tracked
755
Still Active
27
In the Courts
24
Restored
450
Days Tracking

Results for "compliance"

24 Actions  ·  Page 1 of 3
Active

Executive Order on K-12 Education and Alleged Ideological Content

Executive Order 14190 was signed on January 29, 2025, directing federal agencies to review and restrict certain curricula and training in K-12 schools. The order targets content related to race, gender, and sexuality, instructing the Department of Education to withhold federal funding from schools not in compliance. Confirmed effects include federal review processes initiated at the Department of Education; actual implementation outcomes and school-level compliance remain in early stages.

Active

Executive Order 14179: Removing Barriers to American Leadership in Artificial Intelligence

President Trump signed Executive Order 14179 on January 23, 2025, directing federal agencies to remove regulatory barriers to artificial intelligence development and deployment. The order establishes a framework for accelerating AI innovation through reduced compliance requirements and streamlined approval processes across federal agencies. Confirmed direct impacts include expedited AI project approvals in federal programs and modified regulatory timelines for AI systems in healthcare, transportation, and other sectors.

Active

Cybersecurity Principles for Space Systems

On September 4, 2020, the Trump administration signed a memorandum establishing cybersecurity principles and standards for U.S. space systems and infrastructure. The directive requires federal agencies and contractors developing space systems to implement specified security practices and report on compliance. The order affects how civilian and military space programs implement cybersecurity controls for satellites, ground stations, and related systems used by federal agencies and private contractors.

Expired

Executive Order 13924: Regulatory Relief for Economic Recovery

On May 19, 2020, President Trump signed Executive Order 13924 directing federal agencies to identify and suspend enforcement of regulations deemed to burden economic recovery during the COVID-19 pandemic. The order required agencies to waive, modify, or delay compliance deadlines for existing regulations through December 31, 2020. Confirmed effects included delayed environmental reviews, extended compliance timelines for business regulations, and reduced enforcement actions across multiple federal agencies during the specified period.

Active

Establishment of Interagency Labor Committee for USMCA Monitoring

Executive Order 13918 was signed on April 28, 2020, establishing an interagency labor committee to monitor and enforce labor provisions under Section 711 of the United States-Mexico-Canada Agreement Implementation Act. The committee was tasked with coordinating federal efforts to enforce labor standards and monitor compliance across the trilateral trade agreement. The direct impact on Americans includes potential changes to labor enforcement mechanisms related to goods imported from Mexico and Canada, though the specific enforcement outcomes depend on committee operations.

Active

Establishment of Interagency Environment Committee for USMCA Monitoring

Executive Order 13907 was signed on February 28, 2020, establishing an interagency committee to monitor and enforce environmental provisions under Section 811 of the United States-Mexico-Canada Agreement Implementation Act. The committee coordinates federal agencies in tracking compliance with the trade agreement's environmental standards across the U.S., Mexico, and Canada. The direct impact on Americans includes oversight mechanisms for environmental enforcement related to continental trade, though the order does not directly modify existing environmental regulations.

Active

Presidential Determination on Child Soldiers Prevention Act Waiver

On October 18, 2019, the Trump administration issued a Presidential Determination and Certification under the Child Soldiers Prevention Act of 2008 (Document 2019-24195). The determination exercised the President's authority to waive restrictions on military assistance to countries identified as having child soldiers in their armed forces. The waiver allowed continued or resumed military aid to designated countries despite their non-compliance with child soldier elimination requirements.

Active

Executive Order 13884: Blocking Property of Venezuelan Government

On August 5, 2019, President Trump signed Executive Order 13884, which blocked property and interests in property of the Government of Venezuela within U.S. jurisdiction. The order expanded existing sanctions by prohibiting transactions with specified Venezuelan government entities and officials. The direct impact on Americans includes restrictions on U.S. persons and entities conducting business with designated Venezuelan targets, potential effects on Venezuelan expatriates with frozen assets, and involvement of U.S. financial institutions in compliance and enforcement of asset freezes.

Active

Executive Order 13877: Healthcare Price and Quality Transparency

Executive Order 13877 was signed on June 24, 2019, requiring hospitals to publicly disclose standard charges for items and services, and requiring health insurers to disclose negotiated rates and out-of-pocket costs to patients. The order directed the Department of Health and Human Services to establish rules requiring price transparency. Confirmed effects include: hospitals began publishing price lists (though compliance varied and many lists remained difficult to access), and insurers incrementally increased availability of cost-estimation tools, though widespread patient access to negotiated rates was limited during the Trump administration.

Active

Memorandum directing agency cooperation with Attorney General intelligence review

On May 23, 2019, President Trump signed a memorandum directing federal agencies to cooperate with Attorney General William Barr's review of intelligence activities related to the 2016 presidential campaigns. The memorandum instructed agencies to provide documents and information to support the review without established classification restrictions. The direct effect was to grant the Attorney General broad authority to access classified intelligence materials and require agency compliance with his investigation into origins of the Russia probe.